Abstract
Background During neonatal and paediatric high-flow nasal cannula therapy, optimising the flow setting is crucial for favourable physiological and clinical outcomes. However, considerable variability exists in clinical practice regarding initial flows and subsequent adjustments for these patients. Our review aimed to summarise the impact of various flows during high-flow nasal cannula treatment in neonates and children.
Methods Two investigators independently searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Scopus and Cochrane for in vitro and in vivo studies published in English before 30 April 2023. Studies enrolling adults (≥18 years) or those using a single flow setting were excluded. Data extraction and risk of bias assessments were performed independently by two investigators. The study protocol was prospectively registered with PROSPERO (CRD42022345419).
Results 38 406 studies were identified, with 44 included. In vitro studies explored flow settings’ effects on airway pressures, humidity and carbon dioxide clearance; all were flow-dependent. Observational clinical studies consistently reported that higher flows led to increased pharyngeal pressure and potentially increased intrathoracic airway pressure (especially among neonates), improved oxygenation, and reduced respiratory rate and work of breathing up to a certain threshold. Three randomised controlled trials found no significant differences in treatment failure among different flow settings. Flow impacts exhibited significant heterogeneity among different patients.
Conclusion Individualising flow settings in neonates and young children requires consideration of the patient's peak inspiratory flow, respiratory rate, heart rate, tolerance, work of breathing and lung aeration for optimal care.
Shareable abstract
Tailoring flow settings based on individual factors like peak inspiratory flow, respiratory rate, work of breathing and clinical status helps to optimise high-flow nasal cannula treatment for paediatric patients https://bit.ly/3UcXuta
Introduction
Noninvasive respiratory support, including nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) and noninvasive ventilation (NIV), are commonly used in paediatrics to reduce the need for intubation or the risk of reintubation after liberation from invasive mechanical ventilation [1–3]. Among these treatments, HFNC provides high-flow gas mixtures heated to near-body temperature and humidified to levels exceeding 99% relative humidity, which offers several potential advantages over nasal CPAP and NIV, including ease of installation and setup, greater patient tolerance and a lower risk of nasal tissue injury [4]. HFNC is particularly beneficial for preterm neonates with respiratory distress due to immature lung development or other aetiologies, as well as infants with bronchiolitis or other respiratory diseases [4, 5]. The selection of flow settings for HFNC therapy has been evaluated in numerous studies because it can improve upper airway flow dynamics, affect the positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) (i.e. increase functional residual capacity (FRC)), improve oxygenation, increase dead space washout, augment minute ventilation and reduce work of breathing (WOB) [6–9]. However, the optimal flow setting for HFNC in children remains unclear. Thus, we conducted a review aiming to investigate the physiological and clinical effects of various flow settings during HFNC treatment in paediatric patients.
Literature search strategy and results
The literature search was conducted independently by two authors (CY and PL) in six electronic databases, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Embase, PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science, using the following keywords: (“high-flow nasal cannul*” OR “high flow cannul*” OR “high flow oxygen therapy” OR “high flow oxygen” OR “high flow therapy” OR “HFNC” OR “nasal high flow” OR “NHF”) AND (“flow”) AND (“child” OR “children” OR “pediatric” OR “infants” OR “newborn” OR “neonates” OR “adolescents” OR “youth” OR “teenagers”). The search was limited to papers published in English before 30 April 2023. Original studies investigating more than one HFNC flow setting were included. Studies that only included adult (≥18 years of age) subjects or used only one flow setting during HFNC treatment and review articles, letters, abstracts and editorials were excluded. Study titles and abstracts were initially screened, and full texts were subsequently reviewed to select eligible studies. The review protocol was registered a priori with PROSPERO (registration number: CRD42022345419). Two authors (CY and PL) independently assessed the quality of included studies using the Cochrane Collaboration risk of bias tool 2.0 (RoB2) [10] for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale [11] for nonrandomised trials. Any disagreements regarding study selection, data extraction or quality assessments were resolved through consensus discussions with a third author (WH).
A total of 38 406 studies were identified and 37 851 studies were excluded after screening by titles and abstracts (figure 1). After assessing the eligibility of 555 full-text studies, 505 studies were excluded for using a single flow setting, four for investigating the effects of different flows on aerosol delivery and two because they were animal studies. Consequently, 44 studies were included: 15 were in vitro studies [12–26], two combined in vitro and in vivo studies were conducted on neonates [27, 28] and 27 were clinical studies [6–8, 29–52]. In the clinical studies (supplementary table S1), 14 were conducted on neonates [29–41, 51] including preterm infants with [29, 31, 34, 35, 37, 38, 51] or without [30, 32, 33, 36, 39–41] lung disease, while 13 focused on paediatric patients with bronchiolitis [6–8, 44, 46–48, 50, 52] or requiring HFNC for various reasons [42, 43, 45, 49], with most the patients younger than 2 years. Four of these studies were RCTs [48–51], and ten were randomised crossover studies [31, 33, 34, 37, 39–41, 43, 45, 46].
Of the 14 randomised trials, all had a low risk of missing outcome data and selection bias in reported results, 13 showed a low risk of deviation from the intended intervention, and three exhibited a low risk in the randomisation process. All RCTs had a clear description of random sequence generation, but only two explained the study allocation concealment. All the randomised crossover trials demonstrated a low risk of bias arising from period and carryover effects. Blinding of participants and/or the treating clinicians was conducted in only one study (supplementary figure S1). Among the 13 nonrandomised trials, 12 were of good quality and one had poor quality in comparability on the most important factors and other risk factors (supplementary table S2).
Peak tidal inspiratory flow for neonates and children younger than 2 years
HFNC delivers gas mixtures at flows that match or exceed a patient's peak tidal inspiratory flow (PTIF), thus it is crucial to understand a patient's inspiratory flow demand to provide appropriate flow. Available evidence [44, 53–55] suggests that PTIF varies across different ages and diseases among neonates and children younger than 2 years (supplementary table S3). The PTIF indexed to body weight declines as subjects grow.
The effects of flow settings: in vitro findings
In vitro studies investigated the effects of different flow settings on several variables, including PEEP [13–18, 20, 23, 24, 26–28], humidity and condensation [19, 22, 25, 26], carbon dioxide (CO2) clearance [21, 23], tidal volume (VT) [17, 24], delivered inspiratory oxygen fraction (FIO2) [25] and noise level [12].
PEEP
Studies consistently reported that PEEP increased as flow increased [13–18, 20, 23, 24, 26–28]. Several other factors, including HFNC devices [14, 23, 28], prong-to-nares ratio [13, 14, 16, 20, 28], mouth status [15, 16, 20, 23, 27] and gas types [24], have been found to affect the level of PEEP.
Nielsen et al. [23] conducted a study using simulated three-dimensional paediatric anatomic airway models of preterm neonates, term neonates, toddlers and small children. They compared PEEP levels at different flows using the Optiflow (Fisher & Paykel Healthcare) and Precision Flow (Vapotherm Inc.) HFNC systems. They observed change points in the flow in all models except for the open-mouth preterm model. Change points were defined as the flow where the PEEP increment started to decrease, meaning the PEEP increment with flow beyond the change point was smaller compared to flows below the change point. The change points varied across different models, with a change point of 4 L·min−1 in the preterm and term neonates, and 10 L·min−1 in the toddler and small child with mouth closed.
In paediatric patients, the HFNC devices manufactured by Fisher & Paykel and Vapotherm are commonly used. Three studies [14, 23, 28] compared the PEEP levels generated by these two devices. When the nasal cannula size was used according to the manufacturer's instructions, with a minimum prong-to-nares ratio of 1:1.25, both devices produced minimal and similar PEEP levels at low gas flows. This similarity was observed when the flow was below the change point in the models of Nielsen et al. [23], ≤6 L·min−1 in the neonatal model of Hasan et al. [14], and ≤4 L·min−1 in the infant model of Kubicka et al. [28]. However, at higher set flows, the Vapotherm device generated higher PEEP levels than the Fisher & Paykel device [14, 23], probably due to the pressure relief feature by the latter device.
Notably, PEEP is affected by several factors beyond flow. PEEP increased as the prong-to-nares ratio decreased [13, 14, 16, 20, 28], while PEEP decreased significantly when the mouth was open [15, 16, 20, 23, 27]. Moreover, using helium-oxygen (a gas mixture lighter than air) during HFNC treatment resulted in lower PEEP levels compared to air [24].
CO2 clearance
CO2 clearance increased as flow increased with the mouth closed [21, 23]. However, during open-mouth breathing, expiratory CO2 significantly decreased at minimally tested flows (e.g. 3 L·min−1 in the preterm neonate model and 8 L·min−1 in the toddler model) compared to baseline, then remained near constant as the HFNC flow increased. There was no significant difference in expiratory CO2 clearance between the Vapotherm and Fisher & Paykel devices across all testing conditions [23]. When the prong was half inserted into the nares, CO2 washout time was longer with the mouth closed but similar with the mouth open, compared to the fully inserted condition [21].
Humidity and condensation
When the study models and HFNC circuits were placed inside an incubator, absolute humidity remained stable across various flows. Conversely, absolute humidity and condensate volume increased with flow when the circuits were placed in ambient air, regardless of VT [25].
VT, FIO2 and noise level
Moore et al. [24] found that, as flow was increased from 1 to 2 L·kg−1·min−1, VT tended to decrease when air was used during HFNC treatment, but the change was minimal when helium-oxygen was used. As flow increased, the measured FIO2 approached the set FIO2 more closely [25]. König et al. [12] reported that noise levels increased as the HFNC flow increased from 4 to 8 L·min−1, and that noise levels were higher with the Vapotherm device compared to the Fisher & Paykel device.
The effects of different flow settings in neonates
Oxygenation and ventilation
The effects of different flow settings on oxygenation were evaluated in five studies involving preterm infants. Regardless of the HFNC device used in the studies, the oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry (SpO2)/FIO2 ratio and SpO2 showed improvement as the flow increased (figure 2a and supplementary table S4) [27, 33, 34, 39, 40]. Notably, the SpO2/FIO2 ratio has been shown in children to predict NIV failure [56, 57].
Two studies reported no significant changes of VT with different flows [31, 33]. However, Liew et al. [33] reported a significant reduction in respiratory rate (figure 2b) and minute ventilation (supplementary table S5) when the mean flow was increased from 1.4 to 2.1 L·kg−1·min−1. These values remained stable thereafter. Additionally, there were no observable changes in transcutaneous CO2 measurements with different flows. In contrast, Lavizzari et al. [34] reported increased VT and minute ventilation, along with a reduction in respiratory rate, when the flow was increased from 2–4 to 4–6 L·min−1 using Vapotherm for preterm infants with mild to moderate respiratory distress syndrome and an average birth weight of 1.5 kg. However, no changes were observed in transcutaneous CO2 measurements. It is important to note that, in these studies, respiratory rate either increased or remained stable when flow exceeded 4 L·kg−1·min−1 [27, 33, 39]. Furthermore, in the same studies, an increase in heart rate was observed (figure 2c), which could potentially indicate patient discomfort at such high flow settings [27, 33].
Airway pressure
Multiple studies [2, 27–31, 33, 34, 36, 40, 41] have investigated the relationship between flows and airway pressure measured at various locations, including the oral cavity [28], thoracic oesophagus [2, 27, 31, 40] and pharynx [29, 30, 33, 34, 36, 40, 41] (figure 2d). Additionally, different HFNC devices were used across studies. Comparing the Fisher & Paykel to the Vapotherm device, two studies found no significant differences in pharyngeal pressure [41] or oral cavity pressure [28]. Additionally, Liew et al. [33] reported that nasopharyngeal pressure during open-mouth breathing was approximately two thirds of that observed during closed-mouth breathing across various flows. They also found only mild differences in intratracheal pressure between <0.7 and >0.7 prong-to-nares sizes.
Regardless of the devices used, the patient's mouth status [29, 33] and the locations where pressure measurements were taken, airway pressure consistently increased proportionally to the flow in a near-linear relationship [2, 27–31, 33, 34, 36, 40, 41]. Notably, at high flow settings, airway pressure measurements could become very high. For instance, during closed-mouth breathing, Iyer et al. [38] reported end-expiratory oesophageal pressure as high as 9 cmH2O (interquartile range (IQR) 6–15 cmH2O) at a mean flow of 5.5 L·kg−1·min−1 in preterm infants using Vapotherm. Such elevated oesophageal pressure raises concerns about the potential for lung injury, necessitating careful evaluation of the benefits versus harms if flows of that magnitude are used clinically [58]. A single study measured ventilation distribution and end-expiratory levels using electrical impedance tomography (supplementary table S6). This study found no significant differences in these measurements with flows of 2, 4 and 6 L·min−1. The lack of significant differences may be attributed to the relatively low oesophageal pressures generated by the three flows, with the highest mean oesophageal pressure reported as 3.9 cmH2O [40].
Work of breathing
Hough et al. [39, 40] conducted studies using various measurement tools to assess WOB (figure 2e). In one study [40], WOB was assessed using the pressure rate product (PRP) obtained through an oesophageal catheter under three tested flow conditions (2, 4 and 6 L·min−1), with the lowest PRP noted when flow was set at 4 L·min−1. The corresponding flows per kilogram, calculated based on the mean weight of the included patients, were 1.6, 3.2 and 4.8 L·kg−1·min−1, respectively. Another study by Hough et al. [39] employed respiratory inductance plethysmography and transcutaneous electromyography to assess changes in the electrical activity of the diaphragm as surrogates for WOB (supplementary table S6). Overall muscle activity decreased as the flow increased from 2 to 4 L·min−1, followed by an increase in overall muscle activity for flows of 6 and 8 L·min−1, with significant differences noted between 4 and 8 L·min−1. The corresponding flows per kilogram were 1.4, 2.7, 4.1 and 5.4 L·kg−1·min−1 for the four flows (2, 4, 6 and 8 L·min−1), respectively. In these two studies, WOB was found to be lowest at flows of 3.2 and 2.7 L·kg−1·min−1, respectively, with an increase in WOB observed when flow exceeded 4 L·kg−1·min−1.
Similarly, Jeffreys et al. [37] employed noninvasive diaphragm electromyography (EMG) to assess WOB, with EMG amplitude serving as a surrogate measure. The EMG amplitude increased as the flow increased from 4 to 6 and 8 L·min−1, corresponding to flows per kilogram of 4, 6 and 8 L·kg−1·min−1. Conversely, Saslow et al. [31] did not observe significant differences in WOB with flows of 3, 4 and 5 L·min−1 using Vapotherm, which corresponded to 1.9, 2.6 and 3.2 L·kg−1·min−1, respectively.
Collectively, these studies suggest the existence of a potential optimal range for the relationship between flow settings and WOB, with WOB being lowest within the flow range of 2–3 L·kg−1·min−1 [31, 37, 39, 40].
Noise
Noise exposure from medical equipment is believed to be a risk factor for hearing loss in neonates. Roberts et al. [32] measured the noise level near the infant's ear during HFNC treatment using Optiflow, showing a nonsignificant increase in noise levels with higher HFNC flows, that were comparable to those generated by CPAP therapy.
Treatment failure
In a RCT involving 212 preterm neonates with a gestational age of ≥28 weeks, Balasubramanian et al. [51] compared HFNC therapy under two different flows (5 versus 8 L·min−1) and found no significant difference in treatment failure rates between the two groups (29% in the 5 L·min−1 group versus 22% in the 8 L·min−1 group, p=0.22) (table 1). Treatment failure was defined as the need for higher respiratory support (CPAP or invasive ventilation) or surfactant therapy. Furthermore, none of the patients developed air leak syndromes. However, it is important to note that more patients in the 5 L·min−1 group required increased flows compared to the 8 L·min−1 group (64% versus 43%, p=0.004). Interestingly, in a subgroup analysis specifically focusing on patients with a gestational age of 34–366/7 weeks, the treatment failure rate was lower in the 8 L·min−1 group compared to the 5 L·min−1 group (0% versus 29%, p=0.03). This observation may be attributed to the potential inadequacy of the lower flow (5 L·min−1) in neonates of this age who typically have a higher body weight. Although their exact weights were not reported, considering the average weight of the overall included neonates (1.6±0.4 kg), if a weight of 2 kg was used to calculate the flows, the actual flows in the two groups would be 4 versus 2.5 L·kg−1·min−1. The 2.5 L·kg−1·min−1 flow was likely insufficient for the neonates at this age. Conversely, for the other two age groups (28–306/7 and 31–336/7 weeks of gestational age), if one used weights of 1 and 1.5 kg to calculate the flows in the two groups, both would have exceeded 3 L·kg−1·min−1, which could explain the similar treatment failure rates observed in both groups.
These findings highlight the potential impact of flows relative to body weight on treatment outcomes in preterm neonates receiving HFNC therapy. Further research is warranted to explore the optimal flow based on individual gestational age and body weight, ensuring appropriate and effective management for this vulnerable population.
The effects of different flow settings in young children
Oxygenation and ventilation
In the two studies involving infants with bronchiolitis, an increase in flow was associated with an improvement in the patient's SpO2/FIO2 ratio (supplementary table S4) [7, 8]. When the flow was increased from 0.5 to 2 L·kg−1·min−1 [44, 46], no significant differences were observed in VT and minute ventilation, as assessed by respiratory inductance plethysmography [45], pneumotachography [44] or electric impedance tomography [46]. Moreover, when flow was increased from 0.4 to 2 L·kg−1·min−1, a reduction in respiratory rate was observed in six studies (figure 3a) [6, 8, 43–46], except for the study conducted by Nascimento et al. [7], in which no significant differences in respiratory rate were observed across flows of 0.5–2 L·kg−1·min−1 when using the Vapotherm device.
Airway pressure
Similar to studies conducted in preterm infants, airway pressure was measured at different locations in paediatric patients (figure 3b). In the two studies that measured pharyngeal pressure, an increase in pressure was observed with increasing flows [6, 47]. Notably, Arora et al. [47] compared pharyngeal pressure during open- and closed-mouth breathing and found a slight pressure reduction with open-mouth breathing.
Three studies measured oesophageal pressure at the end of expiration (Pese) [8, 43, 46], and two reported an increase in Pese with increasing flows [8, 43]. However, the extent of this increase was less pronounced in the Rubin et al. [43] study, which included post-extubated children with a median age of 6.5 months (IQR 1.3–15.5 months), compared to the Hough et al. study [8], which included infants with bronchiolitis and a mean age of 3.2±2.1 months. Interestingly, in the study conducted by Guglielmo et al. [46] with bronchiolitis patients aged 9.5 months (IQR 5.8–19.5 months), no significant differences in Pese were found across flows of 0.5–2 L·kg−1·min−1. However, it is worth noting that in Guglielmo et al. study [46], Pese measured at the lowest flow settings (≤0.5 L·kg−1·min−1) was higher (10.0 cmH2O, IQR 7.2–15.2 cmH2O) compared to the values reported in the Rubin et al. [43] study (4.8±4.3 cmH2O) and the Hough et al. [8] study (−0.2±7.6 cmH2O). Additionally, in Guglielmo et al. [46], 84% of patients showed hyperinflation in chest radiography findings. These findings suggest varying degrees of air trapping in different studies, with Pese potentially reflecting intrinsic PEEP rather than the external PEEP created by HFNC.
Work of breathing
In the aforementioned five studies [6, 8, 43, 46, 47] that reported pharyngeal pressure or Pese, four measured PRP (figure 3c) [8, 43, 46] or pressure-time product (supplementary table S7) [6] as surrogate markers of WOB, and all reported a reduction in WOB with increasing flows. Additionally, Papoff et al. [44] measured PRP and pressure-time product, and both values decreased with increasing flows. Weiler et al. [42] also reported a 21% reduction in PRP as the flow increased from 0.5 to 2 L·kg−1·min−1. However, it is important to note that not all patients responded optimally to the highest flow. Weiler et al. [42] observed that the flow with the lowest WOB varied for different patients, with 51%, 35% and 12% patients responding best at 2.0, 1.5 and 1.0 L·kg−1·min−1, respectively. Stratified analysis based on studies with patients of different mean ages indicated that patients with higher baseline WOB had a more substantial reduction with increasing flows (supplementary figure S2). However, Hough et al. [8] found that patients with very high WOB at baseline exhibited minimal responses between flows of 0.4 and 1.7 L·kg−1·min−1. Notably, patients with lower baseline PRP demonstrated a plateau response at lower flows, e.g. those with a mean baseline PRP around 400 cmH2O·min−1 had a PRP plateau at flows of 0.8 and 1.25 L·kg−1·min−1. In contrast, patients with a baseline PRP around 800 cmH2O·min−1 reached a PRP plateau at flows of 1.5 and 2.0 L·kg−1·min−1.
Three studies [43, 44, 46] reported decreased inspiratory effort, as measured by change in oesophageal pressure swings, with increasing flows. Moreover, the modified Wood's clinical asthma score and respiratory distress score also decreased with increasing flows [6, 7].
Treatment failure
Two RCTs compared different HFNC flow settings for patients with acute bronchiolitis (table 1). Yurtseven et al. [48] compared HFNC therapy at a flow of 1 versus 2 L·kg−1·min−1 in 168 children with a mean age of 10.1±6.7 months, while Milési et al. [50] compared 2 versus 3 L·kg−1·min−1 in 286 infants with a mean age of 1.6±1.9 months. Neither study found any significant differences in treatment failure rates between the two flow groups, and both reported a proportion of patients who could not tolerate the higher flows and required flow reduction. Yurtseven et al. [48] found that patients in the 1 L·kg−1·min−1 group had faster clinical improvement and weaning from HFNC, but this should be interpreted with caution because there may be a cognitive bias related to weaning speed.
It is worth noting that the two studies used different definitions for treatment failure (supplementary table S8) and, more importantly, included patients with different disease severity. Patients in the Yurtseven et al. [48] study were likely less sick than those in the Milési et al. [50] study, as reflected by 45% of patients being weaned from HFNC within 2 h of initiation and fewer instances of treatment failure in the former. This suggests that the inspiratory flow demand of the patients in the Yurtseven et al. [48] study might have been lower. Additionally, patients in that study were older and, as mentioned earlier, children's PTIF calculated using weight declines as they grow. Interestingly, in a retrospective study of 251 infants with bronchiolitis with a median age of 5.3 months (IQR 2.4–9.1 months) treated with HFNC, most patients (75%) received a flow of 1.5 L·kg−1·min−1, 18% received 1 L·kg−1·min−1 and 7% received 2 L·kg−1·min−1 [52]. Patients receiving 1.5 L·kg−1·min−1 had lower treatment failure rates (13%) than the other two groups (33% and 26%, respectively) and shorter length of stay [52]. However, fewer patients required increased flow in the group of 2 L·kg−1·min−1 (5%) than the groups of 1.5 L·kg−1·min−1 (59%) and 1 L·kg−1·min−1 (84%) [52].
Therefore, among young children, one should cautiously conclude that a flow of 1 L·kg−1·min−1 is appropriate. However, for younger infants or sicker children, a higher flow, such as 1.5–2 L·kg−1·min−1, might be necessary for optimal effect. Regardless, close monitoring of treatment response and tolerance, and flow titration based on individual needs, are crucial for the success of HFNC therapy.
Apnoeic ventilation
In a RCT conducted by Riva et al. [49], 30 children weighing 10–15 kg and requiring elective surgery were randomised to receive HFNC at a flow of either 2 or 4 L·kg−1·min−1 following the induction of anaesthesia. Transcutaneous CO2 level was measured for 10 mins, but no significant differences were observed between the two groups, suggesting that a flow of 2 L·kg−1·min−1 is likely sufficient to generate ventilatory effects during apnoeic ventilation in this population.
Discussion
In this systematic review, we assessed both in vitro and in vivo studies investigating the impacts of various flows among paediatric populations. We also discussed the short-term physiological effects, including oxygenation, ventilation, airway pressure and WOB, along with long-term treatment failures in both neonates and young children.
Similarities and differences in the effects of flow settings in neonates and young children
In both neonates and children under 2 years of age, an increase in flow resulted in improved oxygenation and decreased respiratory rates (table 2). Interestingly, the impact of open-mouth breathing on airway pressure was less pronounced in neonates and young children compared to in vitro models and adult patients [59]. This difference may be explained by the innate anatomic differences in the airway structure and physiological functions between adult and paediatric patients, as well as between human beings and simulated models. Innate anatomic differences between the airways of adults and young children may also contribute to this disparity.
However, there are notable differences in the evidence assessed between neonates and young children in terms of HFNC therapy flows used in the available studies. Neonatal studies generally employed higher flows when indexed to body weight (L·kg−1·min−1) compared to paediatric studies. For instance, the maximum flow investigated in neonates was 9 L·kg−1·min−1, compared to 3 L·kg−1·min−1 in young children. Another difference lies in the airway pressure generated during HFNC treatment. In neonates, as HFNC flow was increased, airway pressure increased proportionally to the flows, demonstrating a near-linear relationship, irrespective of the locations where pressure measurements were taken [2, 27–31, 33, 34, 36, 40, 41]. Conversely, in young children, as HFNC flow was increased, airway pressure varied significantly and had no clear, consistent relationship, depending on whether the patients had hyperinflation [6, 8, 43, 46, 47]. Moreover, when evaluating WOB, the optimal flow with the lowest WOB generally was higher in neonates (2–3 L·kg−1·min−1) compared to young children (1.5–2.0 L·kg−1·min−1) [42, 50]. It must be noted that individual patients responded differently to these flows in both populations, possibly due to varying inspiratory flow demands. HFNC therapy continues to be used clinically in heterogeneous disease processes and the exact physiological effects show variance based on patient size, flow demands, disease type (i.e. obstructive lung disease versus parenchymal lung disease) and disease severity, among other factors.
Future research directions
For preterm infants, RCTs are needed to investigate the effect of weight-based flows (L·kg−1·min−1) on clinical outcomes, such as treatment failure and the need for advanced respiratory support (i.e. NIV, invasive ventilation). Promising results from physiological studies and a subgroup analysis from the RCT conducted by Balasubramanian et al. [51] suggest a flow of 3–4 L·kg−1·min−1 may be beneficial for some neonates. However, further RCTs are required to more definitively evaluate this higher flow strategy relative to patient outcomes. In the paediatric population, flows higher than 2 L·kg−1·min−1 have not been shown to be helpful [50].
In children aged between 28 days and 2 years of age, the PTIF exhibits large variance relative to patient size and disease severity, especially in pathological conditions with obstructive lung disease, often marked by hyperinflation. Therefore, individualised flow settings based on inspiratory flow demand (PTIF) and physiological responses, such as respiratory rate, heart rate, tolerance, WOB and lung aeration, should be investigated. Further research is needed to explore these aspects across various pathological conditions. Additionally, it is important to note that the current evidence predominantly stems from patients with a clinical diagnosis of bronchiolitis, so studies exploring the effects of different HFNC flows on other respiratory conditions are sorely needed. Lastly, for children older than 2 years, the effects of various flows on their physiological responses, tolerances and clinical outcomes are largely unknown from the evidence at hand. Therefore, further studies to address these knowledge gaps are needed in older children.
Conclusion
In neonates and young children, the PTIF varies based on age and disease severity. Calculated PTIF using weight (L·kg−1·min−1) declines as children grow. During HFNC treatment, increasing flow has been shown to improve oxygenation. However, other physiological responses, such as respiratory rate, airway pressure, WOB and lung aeration, may differ between neonates and older children. Given the variability in PTIF and other physiological responses, individualised flow settings based on the patient's inspiratory flow demand and other factors, such as respiratory rate, heart rate, tolerance, WOB, lung aeration and pathological conditions, may be necessary for optimal treatment application.
Supplementary material
Supplementary Material
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Supplementary material ERR-0223-2023.SUPPLEMENT
Footnotes
Provenance: Submitted article, peer reviewed.
Availability of data and materials: Data will be available 36 months after article publication to researchers who provide a methodologically sound and ethically approved proposal, for any purpose of analysis.
Author contributions: J. Li designed this project. P. Liu, C. Yang and W.J.A. He performed the literature search and screening, and conducted the risk of bias assessment for the included studies. F.A. Albuainain and N. Deng extracted the data for the review. F.A. Albuainain and N. Deng had full access to the data and verified the data. J. Li and N. Deng drafted the manuscript. B.J. Ring, A.G. Miller, A.T. Rotta, R.D. Guglielmo and C. Milési interpreted the data and provided critical edits and comments on the manuscript. All authors reviewed the manuscript for important intellectual content and approved the final manuscript. J. Li, N. Deng, W.J.A. He, P. Liu and C. Yang contributed equally to the overall project described in this article. J. Li was responsible for the decision to submit the manuscript.
Conflict of interest: J. Li discloses research funding from Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Ltd, Aerogen Ltd, the American Association for Respiratory Care and the Rice Foundation; and speaker fees from the American Association for Respiratory Care, Aerogen Ltd, Heyer Ltd, Vincent Medical and Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Ltd. A.G. Miller discloses relationships with Saxe Communications, S2N Health and Fisher & Paykel. A.T. Rotta discloses relationships with Breas US and Elsevier. Both J. Li and A.G. Miller serve as section editors for Respiratory Care. The other authors have no conflict of interest to disclose.
- Received October 30, 2023.
- Accepted January 18, 2024.
- Copyright ©The authors 2024
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