Home mechanical ventilation (HMV) is a method of treatment in children with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) and alveolar hypoventilation regardless of primary disease. The goal of the study was to ...describe the changes in the HMV program in Serbia during the last two decades. Cross-sectional retrospective study included data from the national HMV database from 2001 until 2019. HMV was initiated in clinically stable patients after the failure to wean from mechanical ventilation succeeded acute respiratory deterioration or electively after the confirmation of SDB and alveolar hypoventilation by sleep study or continuous transcutaneous capnometry and oximetry. The study included 105 patients (50 ventilated noninvasively and 55 ventilated invasively via tracheostomy). The median age at the time of HMV initiation was 6.2 years (range: 0.3-18 years). Invasive ventilation had been initiated significantly earlier than noninvasive ventilation (NIV) (
< 0.01), without difference in duration of ventilatory support (
= 0.95). Patients on NIV were significantly older (
< 0.01) than those ventilated invasively (13 and 1.5 years, respectively). Average waiting time on equipment had been shortened significantly-from 6.3 months until 2010 to 1 month at the end of the study (
< 0.01). Only 6.6% of patients had obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) requiring HMV. During the study period, 24% patients died, mostly due to uncontrolled infection or progression of underlying disease. Availability and shortened waiting time for the equipment accompanied by advanced overall health care led to substantial improvements in the national HMV program. However, future improvements should be directed to systematic evaluation of SDB in patients with OSAS, early diagnosis of nocturnal hypoventilation, and subsequent timely initiation of chronic ventilation.
Introduction/aim: Central congenital hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS) is a rare genetic disorder characterized by autonomic dysregulation and alveolar hypoventilation with ventilatory support being ...the cornerstone of long-term survival. The aim was to present different ventilatory strategies in CCHS. Material and methods: The study included retrospectively analyzed medical records of five patients diagnosed with CCHS in a national pediatric center. Alveolar hypoventilation was evidenced by noninvasive continuous transcutaneous capnometry and central sleep-disordered breathing documented by polygraphy. Clinical evaluation included cardiac evaluation, rectal biopsies, and urinalysis of catecholamine levels. Life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias were indications for pacemaker implantation. Genetic analyses of alanine residues in paired-like homeobox 2B gene (PHOX2B) confirmed the diagnosis. Results: A range of pathogenic changes in the PHOX2B gene resulted in varying clinical outcomes. 3/4 (75%) of patients with an early onset were ventilated continuously through a tracheostomy tube, while one patient was successfully treated with noninvasive ventilation (NIV) as the preferred option. Additionally, NIV was applied in one child with early-onset disease after decannulation. Finally, NIV was also feasible in a case with late-onset disease presented by the time of four years with symptoms of pulmonary hypertension. There were no serious side effects of ventilation, and one patient died due to cardiac arrhythmias. Conclusion: Invasive mechanical ventilation remains the treatment of choice in most children with early-onset disease. However, the indications for NIV have been widened from overnight ventilation in the late-onset course to selected cases with early-onset disease. The timely switch from IMV to NIV has been popularized in recent years worldwide.