Episode Details
Back to EpisodesPulm PEEPs Pearls: Spontaneous Breathing Trials
Season 1
Episode 117
Published 3 months, 4 weeks ago
Description
This week’s Pulm PEEPs Pearls episode is all about spontaneous breathing trials (SBTs). SBTs are a standard part of the daily practice in the intensive care unit, but the exact methods vary across ICUs and institutions. Listen in to hear about the most common methods of SBTs, the physiology of each method, and what the evidence says.
Contributors
This episode was prepared with research by Pulm PEEPs Associate Editor George Doumat.
Dustin Latimer, another Pulm PEEPs Associate Editor, assisted with audio and video editing.
Key Learning Points
- What an SBT is really testing
- An SBT is a stress test for post-extubation work of breathing, not just a ventilator check.
- The goal is to balance sensitivity and specificity:
- Too hard → unnecessary failures and delayed extubation
- Too easy → false positives and higher risk of reintubation
- Common SBT modalities and how they compare
- T-piece
- No inspiratory support and no PEEP
- Highest work of breathing
- Most “physiologic” but often too strict
- Pressure support (PS) + PEEP (e.g., 5/5 or 8/5)
- Offsets ETT resistance and provides modest assistance
- Easier to pass than T-piece
- CPAP (0/5)
- No inspiratory help, but provides PEEP to counter ETT resistance
- Sits between PS and T-piece in difficulty
- Evidence favors pressure-supported SBTs for most patients
- Large meta-analysis (~6,000 patients, >40 RCTs):
- Pressure-supported SBTs increase successful extubation (~7% absolute benefit)
- No increase in reintubation rates
- Trials (e.g., FAST trial):
- Patients pass SBTs earlier
- Leads to earlier extubation and fewer ventilator-associated risks
- Bottom line: A 30-minute PS 5/5 SBT is evidence-based and appropriate for most stable ICU patients
- When a T-piece still makes sense
T-piece SBTs are useful when:
- Cost of reintubation is high
- Difficult airway
- Prior failed extubation
- Pretest probability of success is low
- Prolonged or difficult weaning
- Tracheostomy vs extubation decisions
- Need to mimic physiology without positive pressure
- In LV dysfunction or pulmonary edema even small amounts PEEP may significantly improve physiology
- Some centers use a hybrid approach: PS SBT → short confirmatory T-piece before extubation
- CPAP as a middle ground
- Rationale:
- Allows full patient effort while compensating for ETT resistance
- Evidence:
- Fewer and smaller trials
- Possible modest improvement in extubation success
- No clear mortality or LOS benefit
- Reasonable option based on patient physiology, institutional protocols, and clinician comfort
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