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Background: Using the frequentist approach, a recent meta-analysis of three randomized clinical trials in patients undergoing intraoperative ventilation during general anesthesia for major surgery failed to show the benefit of ventilation that uses high positive end-expiratory pressure with recruitment maneuvers when compared to ventilation that uses low positive end-expiratory pressure without recruitment maneuvers. Methods: We designed a protocol for a Bayesian analysis using the pooled dataset. The multilevel Bayesian logistic model will use the individual patient data. Prior distributions will be prespecified to represent a varying level of skepticism for the effect estimate. The primary endpoint will be a composite of postoperative pulmonary complications (PPC) within the first seven postoperative days, which reflects the primary endpoint of the original studies. We preset a range of practical equivalence to assess the futility of the intervention with an interval of odds ratio (OR) between 0.9 and 1.1 and assess how much of the 95% of highest density interval (HDI) falls between the region of practical equivalence. Ethics and dissemination: The used data derive from approved studies that were published in recent years. The findings of this current analysis will be reported in a new manuscript, drafted by the writing committee on behalf of the three research groups. All investigators listed in the original trials will serve as collaborative authors.

Original publication

DOI

10.12688/f1000research.125861.2

Type

Journal article

Journal

F1000Research

Publication Date

01/2022

Volume

11

Addresses

Perioperative Medicine, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria la Fe, Valencia, Spain, 46026, Spain.

Keywords

PROVHILO investigators, iPROVE investigators, PROBESE investigators, PROVE network investigators, Humans, Lung Diseases, Postoperative Complications, Intraoperative Care, Positive-Pressure Respiration, Anesthesia, General, Bayes Theorem, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic