High-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) oxygen therapy is carried out using an air/oxygen blender,
active humidifier, single heated tube, and nasal cannula. Able to deliver adequately
heated and humidified medical gas at flows up to 60 L/min, it is considered to have
a number of physiological advantages compared with other standard oxygen therapies,
including reduced anatomical dead space, PEEP, constant F(IO2), and good humidification.
Although few large randomized clinical trials have been performed, HFNC has been gaining
attention as an alternative respiratory support for critically ill patients. Published
data are mostly available for neonates. For critically ill adults, however, evidence
is uneven because the reports cover various subjects with diverse underlying conditions,
such as hypoxemic respiratory failure, exacerbation of COPD, postextubation, preintubation
oxygenation, sleep apnea, acute heart failure, and conditions entailing do-not-intubate
orders. Even so, across the diversity, many published reports suggest that HFNC decreases
breathing frequency and work of breathing and reduces the need for respiratory support
escalation. Some important issues remain to be resolved, such as definitive indications
for HFNC and criteria for timing the starting and stopping of HFNC and for escalating
treatment. Despite these issues, HFNC has emerged as an innovative and effective modality
for early treatment of adults with respiratory failure with diverse underlying diseases.