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Vol. 28. Issue S1.
1st STUDENT SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF THE BRAZILIAN ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH AND POSTGRADUATE IN PHYSIOTHERAPY (ABRAPG-FT)
(01 April 2024)
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Vol. 28. Issue S1.
1st STUDENT SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF THE BRAZILIAN ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH AND POSTGRADUATE IN PHYSIOTHERAPY (ABRAPG-FT)
(01 April 2024)
333
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HACOR SCALE FOR PREDICTING NON-INVASIVE MECHANICAL VENTILATION FAILURE: TEST OF CLINIMETRIC PROPERTIES
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Matheus Pereira1, Adriana Claudia Lunardi1
1 Master´s and Doctoral Program in Physical Therapy, Universidade Cidade de São Paulo (UNICID), São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
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Vol. 28. Issue S1

1st STUDENT SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF THE BRAZILIAN ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH AND POSTGRADUATE IN PHYSIOTHERAPY (ABRAPG-FT)

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Background

Non-Invasive Ventilation (NIV) aims to improve pulmonary ventilation and reverse the reason for ventilatory failure. Despite the benefits, improper use can contribute to failure of ventilatory therapy. NIV failure, which translates into the need for orotracheal intubation, is 30% and mortality in this group is 47%. The HACOR scale was developed using HR, RR, PaO2/FiO2 Ratio, Glasgow, Ph and is intended to predict the risk of NIV failure. The scale should be applied after 1h of NIV use. Its score ranges from 0 to 25 points and the closer to the maximum value, the greater the risk of failure. A score above 5 points indicates a greater than 80% risk of therapy failure. The scale showed 72.6% sensitivity and 90.2% specificity for the diagnosis of NIV failure. Given the importance of having a single scale with adequate accuracy for predicting NIV failure available in the literature and the absence of a Brazilian-Portuguese version that tested the clinimetric properties. It is necessary to test the properties so that with the test results, the scale can be used in Brazilian hospitals.

Objectives

Test the clinimetric properties of the HACOR scale in adult patients using NIV in a hospital emergency room.

Methods

The HACOR scale considers heart rate, acidosis (blood pH), Glasgow scale, oxygenation (PaO2/FiO2) and respiratory rate, from 0 to 25 points. The highest score defines the need for intubation (mechanical ventilation-MV) after one hour of NIV in hypoxemic hospitalized patients. Ten minutes later, the second application of the HACOR scale was performed to test the reliability (Intraclass Correlation Coefficient-ICC), measurement error (standard error of measurement-SME and minimum difference detected-DMD), ceiling and floor effect, validity of construct by correlation (Pearson-r) with pulse oxygen saturation (SpO2) and predictive capacity (area under the ROC-curve).

Results

The HACOR scale considers heart rate, acidosis (blood pH), Glasgow scale, oxygenation (PaO2/FiO2) and respiratory rate, from 0 to 25 points. The highest score defines the need for intubation (mechanical ventilation-MV) after one hour of NIV in hypoxemic hospitalized patients. Ten minutes later, the second application of the HACOR scale was performed to test the reliability (Intraclass Correlation Coefficient-ICC), measurement error (standard error of measurement-SME and minimum difference detected-DMD), ceiling and floor effect, validity of construct by correlation (Pearson-r) with pulse oxygen saturation (SpO2) and predictive capacity (area under the ROC-curve).

Conclusion

The HACOR scale has adequate clinimetric properties, however, it showed a floor effect in the sample included in this study.

Implications

The study shows the HACOR scale provides an adequate level of reproducibility within emergency rooms and intensive care units in Brazil. That said, it can be used with greater confidence by Brazilian health professionals during their clinical practice, concretely assisting in the decision of progression to orotracheal intubation and assessment of success of non-invasive ventilation. Besides becoming useful for future studies that will use the scale in Brazil.

Keywords:
Noninvasive ventilation
Acute respiratory failure
Clinimetric properties
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Conflict of interest: The authors declare no interest conflict.

Acknowledgment: I would like to thank CAPES for financing this study, the faculty of the Master's and Doctorate program at Universidade Cidade de São Paulo, and the professionals and colleagues at Hospital Santa Marcelina who agreed to help with data collection and study development.

Ethics committee approval: Casa de Saúde Santa Marcelina - (48137421.0.0000.0066).

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Brazilian Journal of Physical Therapy
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