Novel Technique: Noninvasive Ventilation Support Flexible Endoscopy for
Preoperative Manage Neonates of Esophageal Atresia with
Tracheoesophageal Fistula and Respiratory Distress
Abstract
Introduction Pre-operative management of neonates with esophageal
atresia and tracheoesophageal fistula (EA/TEF) requiring positive
pressure ventilation (PPV) support is clinically challenging. This study
evaluates the safety, feasibility and value of flexible endoscopy with
noninvasive ventilation and sustained pharyngeal inflation (FE-NIV-SPI)
in diagnosis and placing a naso-tracheo-fistula-gastric (NTFG) tube
before surgery. Methods A retrospective study conducted from 2017 to
2020 in neonates with Type-C EA/TEF and respiratory distress, where
FE-NIV-SPI performed with NTFG tube placement before surgery. Results
Five neonates were collected, one with duodenal atresia and one with
transposition of great artery. At FE-NIV-SPI, median body weight was
2,399 g and mean age was 15.2 hours. Four neonates yielded severe
(>80% collapsed) tracheomalacia. With this FE-NIV, all
tracheal, fistulas and esophageal lumens could clearly assess and
manage. All fistulas were less than 8mm proximal to carina with mean
orifice width of 5 mm. All NTFG tubes placed successfully after
confirmed the EA/TEF. Three neonates had co-intubated with nasal
endotracheal tube and 2 neonates had received nasal prongs PPV. Mean
procedural time of FE-NIV was 13.6±4.5 minutes. All neonates received
gastric decompression and feeding via NTFG tubes for mean of 11.4±18.2
days and had stable pre-surgical courses. No adverse associated
complication noted. Conclusion FE-NIV-SPI technique enables safe and
accurate measurement of EA/TEF anatomy and placing NTFG tube. It could
avert emergent gastrostomy, aid gastric decompression, feeding, and ETT
intubation, improve PPV, provide pre-surgical stabilization and identify
the fistula location during the surgical correction.