ERJ Open Research (May 2021)

A randomised study of comfort during bronchoscopy comparing conscious sedation and anaesthetist-controlled general anaesthesia, including the utility of bispectral index monitoring

  • Thomas R. Skinner,
  • Joseph Churton,
  • Timothy P. Edwards,
  • Farzad Bashirzadeh,
  • Christopher Zappala,
  • Justin T. Hundloe,
  • Hau Tan,
  • Andrew J. Pattison,
  • Maryann Todman,
  • Gunter F. Hartel,
  • David I. Fielding

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00895-2020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2

Abstract

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Background The difference in patient comfort with conscious sedation versus general anaesthesia for bronchoscopy has not been adequately assessed in a randomised trial. This study aimed to assess if patient comfort during bronchoscopy with conscious sedation is noninferior to general anaesthesia. Methods 96 subjects were randomised to receive conscious sedation or general anaesthesia for bronchoscopy. The primary outcome was subject comfort. Secondary outcomes included willingness to undergo a repeat procedure if necessary and level of sedation assessed clinically and by bispectral index (BIS) monitoring. Results There was no significant difference between subject comfort scores (difference −0.01, 95% CI −0.63–0.61 on a 10-point scale; p=0.97) or willingness to undergo a repeat procedure (97.7% versus 91.8%, 95% CI −4.8–15.5%; p=0.37). Deeper levels of sedation in the general anaesthesia cohort was confirmed with both clinical and BIS monitoring. There was no significant difference in diagnostic accuracy (conscious sedation 93.9%, 95% CI 80.4–98.3% versus general anaesthesia 86.5%, 95% CI 72.0–94.1%; p=0.43). There were more complications (29.6%, 95% CI 18.2–44.2% versus 6.1%, 95% CI 2.1–16.5%; p<0.01) in the general anaesthesia group. There was no relationship between high BIS scores and subject discomfort. BIS levels <40 during a procedure were associated with increased complications. Conclusion Conscious sedation is not inferior to general anaesthesia in providing patient comfort during bronchoscopy, despite lighter sedation, and is associated with fewer complications and comparable diagnostic accuracy. BIS monitoring may have a role in preventing complications associated with deeper sedation.