Annals of Intensive Care (Jul 2024)

Therapeutic impact of basic critical care echocardiography performed by residents after limited training

  • Marine Goudelin,
  • Bruno Evrard,
  • Roxana Donisanu,
  • Céline Gonzalez,
  • Christophe Truffy,
  • Marie Orabona,
  • Antoine Galy,
  • François-Xavier Lapébie,
  • Yvan Jamilloux,
  • Elodie Vandeix,
  • Dominique Belcour,
  • Charles Hodler,
  • Lucie Ramirez,
  • Rémi Gagnoud,
  • Catherine Chapellas,
  • Philippe Vignon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13613-024-01354-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background The objective was to assess the agreement between therapeutic proposals derived from basic critical care echocardiography performed by novice operators in ultrasonography after a limited training (residents) and by experts considered as reference. Secondary objectives were to assess the agreement between operators’ answers to simple clinical questions and the concordance between basic two-dimensional measurements. Methods This observational, prospective, single-center study was conducted over a 3-year period in a medical-surgical intensive care unit. Adult patients with acute circulatory and/or respiratory failure requiring a transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) examination were studied. In each patient, a TTE was performed by a resident novice in ultrasonography after a short training program and by an expert, independently but within 1 h and in random order. Each operator addressed standardized simple clinical questions and subsequently proposed a therapeutic strategy based on a predefined algorithm. Results Residents performed an average of 33 TTE studies in 244 patients (156 men; age: 63 years [52–74]; SAPS2: 45 [34–59]; 182 (75%) mechanically ventilated). Agreement between the therapeutic proposals of residents and experienced operators was good-to-excellent. The concordance was excellent for suggesting fluid loading, inotrope or vasopressor support (all Kappa values > 0.80). Inter-observer agreement was only moderate when considering the indication of negative fluid balance (Kappa: 0.65; 95% CI 0.50–0.80), since residents proposed diuretics in 23 patients (9.5%) while their counterparts had the same suggestion in 35 patients (14.4%). Overall agreement of responses to simple clinical questions was also good-to-excellent. Intraclass correlation coefficient exceeded 0.75 for measurement of ventricular and inferior vena cava size. Conclusions A limited training program aiming at acquiring the basic level in critical care echocardiography enables ICU residents novice in ultrasonography to propose therapeutic interventions with a good-to-excellent agreement with experienced operators.

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