The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a large influx of patients to critical care units in the United Kingdom (UK) and across the world. Figures from the Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre in May 2020 show that the median length of stay for COVID-19 survivors requiring invasive ventilatory support while on the intensive care unit (ICU) was 15 days.1 For these days at the very least, patients are completely reliant on enteral feeding in order to meet their nutritional requirements.The standard method of enteral feeding when a patient is sedated and ventilated is via a nasogastric tube (NGT). Incorrect placement of an NGT can have devastating consequences, including pneumothorax, fistula formation, ulceration, sepsis, and death. Between September 2011 and March 2016, the National Patient Safety Agency in the UK recorded 95 incidents of feeding into the respiratory tract as a result of incorrect NGT placement.2 With the onset of the pandemic, the prevalence of NGT misplacement increased, with the NHS Improvement team reporting 7 cases of misplaced NGTs within just 3 months (April 1, 2020, through June 30, 2020).3 With over 3 million nasogastric or orogastric tubes inserted each year in the UK, the risk of adverse events is very real.
NGT dislodgment is common, with 1 study putting this figure at 40%.4 Recurrent dislodgment of NGTs disrupts nutrition and may lead to the patient missing a feed in a time where nutrition is vital during acute illness. Research has showed that NGT bridling reduces the rate of dislodgment significantly (from 40% to 14%).5 Moreover, a 2018 systematic review looking specifically at NGT dislodgment found 10 out of 11 studies showed a significant reduction in dislodgment following use of a bridle kit.6 Bridling an NGT has been shown to significantly reduce the need for percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy insertion.7 NGT bridle kits have already been used successfully in ICU burn patients, where sloughed skin makes securement particularly difficult with traditional methods.8 With each repeated insertion comes the risk of incorrect placement. COVID-19 ICU patients had specific risk factors for their NGTs becoming dislodged: duration of NGT feeding (in the ICU and on the ward), requirement for proning and de-proning, and post-emergence confusion related to long duration of sedation. Repeated NGT insertion comes with potential risks to the patient and staff, as well as a financial cost. Patient-specific risks include potential for incorrect placement, missed feedings, irradiation (from the patient’s own chest radiograph and from others), and discomfort from manual handling and repeat reinsertions. Staff risk factors include radiation scatter from portable radiographs (especially when dealing with more than 1 patient per bed space), manual handling, and increased pressure on radiographers. Finally, financial costs are related to the NGTs themselves as well as the portable chest radiograph, which our Superintendent Radiographer estimates to be £55 (US $73.86).
The objective of this study was to ascertain the extent of NGT dislodgment in COVID-19 ICU patients after the introduction of NGT bridle kits as a standard of practice and to determine whether this would reduce the number of NGT insertions, patient irradiation, missed feedings, and overall costs. With the introduction of bridle kits, incidence of pressure sores related to the bridle kit were also recorded.
Methods
Data were collected over 2 cycles, the first retrospectively and the second prospectively, once NGT bridle kits were introduced as an intervention.
Cycle 1. Analyzing the current standard of practice: regular NGT insertion with no use of bridle kit
Cycle 1 was done retrospectively, looking at 30 patient notes of COVID-19 patients admitted to the critical care unit (CCU) between March 11, 2020, and April 20, 2020, at Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, Birmingham, UK. All patients admitted to the ICU with COVID-19 requiring invasive ventilation were eligible for inclusion in the study. A total of 32 patients were admitted during this time; however, 2 patients were excluded due to NGTs being inserted prior to ICU admission.