Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a severe lung condition that often requires invasive mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit. In these patients, setting the ventilator appropriately is essential to improve oxygenation while limiting ventilator-induced lung injury. One important ventilator setting is positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), which helps keep the lungs open. However, the optimal PEEP level may vary from one patient to another. The recruitment-to-inflation ratio (R/I ratio) is a bedside measurement used to estimate the potential for lung recruitment during a decrease in PEEP. It compares the compliance of the lung volume recruited by PEEP with the compliance of the already aerated lung. A higher R/I ratio suggests that increasing PEEP is more likely to reopen collapsed lung units, whereas a lower R/I ratio suggests limited recruitability and a higher likelihood that additional pressure would mainly distend lung areas that are already open. In clinical practice, the R/I ratio is increasingly used to guide PEEP adjustment, with the aim of improving recruitment and oxygenation while avoiding unnecessary increases in airway pressure. However, although the R/I ratio is used in routine care, there are currently no data demonstrating that this measurement is reproducible when repeated in the same patient under similar conditions. The hypothesis of this study is that the R/I ratio is reproducible when measured twice in the same patient under stable conditions, including no significant changes in ventilator settings, hemodynamic status, or ongoing treatments. This prospective, multicenter, non-interventional study will include adult ICU patients with ARDS who are receiving invasive mechanical ventilation, deep sedation, and assist-control ventilation. For each patient, airway opening pressure will be assessed, and the R/I ratio will be measured twice on the same day by a trained clinician, between 20 and 120 minutes apart, without changes in ventilator settings or treatments likely to influence the measurement. The main objective is to evaluate the within-patient reproducibility of the R/I ratio. Secondary objectives include describing changes in airway opening pressure and R/I ratio over time, assessing the reproducibility of expired tidal volume during the maneuvers, and evaluating the clinical tolerance of these ventilatory measurements. The study will include 80 patients across 4 French intensive care units. No additional intervention outside routine care will be performed. Clinical, ventilatory, and biological data already collected as part of usual care will be recorded.
Age range
18 Years
Sex
ALL
See this in plain English?
AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Bring these to your next appointment. They're a starting point for a shared conversation — not a sign you qualify or a recommendation to enrol.
Generated to help you prepare — always confirm anything about your own eligibility and care with the study team and your doctor.
The trial coordinator is the person who runs the study day to day. These cover the practical side — logistics, costs, and what taking part would actually mean for your life. The study team confirms whether you meet the criteria; these are questions to ask, not a sign you qualify.
A starting point for the conversation — always confirm anything about your own eligibility, costs, and care with the study team and your doctor.
Intraclass Correlation Coefficient of the Recruitment-to-Inflation Ratio (R/I)
Timeframe: Same day as inclusion, between 20 and 120 minutes between the two measurements