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Clinical Trials/NCT07315477
NCT07315477
Not yet recruiting
Not Applicable

Characteristics of Patients Intubated for Airway Protection in the Intensive Care Unit and Timing of Tracheostomy: a Retrospective Study

Meir Medical Center0 sites200 target enrollmentStarted: February 1, 2026Last updated:

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Status
Not yet recruiting
Enrollment
200
Primary Endpoint
Subgroup of patients with highest need for tracheostomy

Overview

Brief Summary

Every year, approximately 10-15 patients are admitted to the general intensive care unit at our institution who have been intubated for airway protection for various reasons, the main ones being soft tissue infection of the head/neck, anaphylaxis with airway edema, oral and maxillofacial/ENT surgery with airway threat, and head/neck injury with airway threat. Some patients are successfully extubated after the acute condition that caused the need for ventilation in the first place has passed, and some require tracheostomy for reasons related to the primary disease (unresolved edema, continued infectious process, need for additional invasive interventions, etc.) or for reasons related to difficulty in respiratory weaning (poor awakening, muscle weakness, development of respiratory infection, etc.).

We would like to examine whether it is possible to characterize certain parameters in the above patient population that are associated with a higher likelihood of requiring tracheostomy during hospitalization (such as age Adult). In these cases, we may consider performing the tracheostomy earlier.

Study Design

Study Type
Observational
Observational Model
Case Only
Time Perspective
Retrospective

Eligibility Criteria

Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • All patients aged 18-99 who were admitted to the intensive care unit from January 2012 to November 2025 and ventilated for airway protection for any reason.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients who did not meet the above criteria or patients for whom data was missing.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Subgroup of patients with highest need for tracheostomy

Time Frame: 1 year

Subgroup with highest precentage of tracheostomy

Secondary Outcomes

No secondary outcomes reported

Investigators

Sponsor Class
Other
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

sara dichtwald

Dr

Meir Medical Center

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