High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC)
1. Introduction
High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) is an advanced oxygen delivery system that delivers heated, humidified oxygen–air mixture at high flow rates (up to 60–70 L/min) with a precise and adjustable FiO₂ (21–100%).
➡️ In conventional nasal prongs → YES, flow determines FiO₂.
➡️ In HFNC → NO, FiO₂ is independent of flow (when flow ≥ patient inspiratory demand).
2. Components of HFNC System
HFNC consists of:
- Air–oxygen blender → Delivers precise FiO₂ (21–100%)
- Flow generator → Provides high flow up to 60–70 L/min
- Heated humidifier → Maintains gas at 31–37°C
- Heated circuit tubing → Prevents condensation
- Wide-bore nasal cannula → Comfortable high-flow interface
Why heating and humidification are crucial?
- Prevents mucosal injury
- Maintains mucociliary function
- Improves secretion clearance
- Enhances tolerance
Exam point: Dry high-flow oxygen causes epithelial damage and ciliary dysfunction.
3. Physiological Effects of HFNC
HFNC is not “just high oxygen.” It has multiple physiological mechanisms:
3.1 High FiO₂ Delivery
Unlike conventional nasal prongs:
- Delivers stable and predictable FiO₂
- Minimizes room air entrainment
Useful in:
- Severe hypoxemia
- ARDS
- Pneumonia
3.2 Dead Space Washout
HFNC flushes nasopharyngeal dead space:
- Reduces CO₂ rebreathing
- Improves ventilatory efficiency
- Reduces work of breathing
Important in:
- Mild hypercapnia
- Post-extubation support
3.3 Generation of Positive Airway Pressure
HFNC generates low-level PEEP (3–5 cm H₂O):
- Increases end-expiratory lung volume
- Prevents alveolar collapse
- Improves oxygenation
PEEP effect increases with:
- Higher flow
- Closed mouth breathing
Exam point: HFNC ≠ NIV, but provides mild CPAP-like effect.
3.4 Reduced Work of Breathing
Mechanisms:
- Reduced inspiratory resistance
- Better lung compliance
- Improved oxygenation
Clinical markers:
- ↓ Respiratory rate
- ↓ Accessory muscle use
- ↓ Dyspnea score
3.5 Improved Secretion Clearance
Humidification:
- Maintains mucus viscosity
- Enhances ciliary activity
- Prevents crust formation
Very useful in:
- Post-extubation
- Bronchiectasis
- Pneumonia
4. Indications of HFNC
4.1 Acute Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure (AHRF)
Strongest Evidence Area
Landmark trial:
- FLORALI trial
Key findings:
- Lower intubation rates (especially PaO₂/FiO₂ < 200)
- Lower 90-day mortality vs NIV
Preferred in:
- ARDS (mild–moderate)
- Severe pneumonia
- Viral pneumonitis (including COVID era practice)
4.2 Post-Extubation Support
- Reduces reintubation in low–moderate risk patients
- Alternative to NIV in selected cases
High-risk extubation:
- HFNC + NIV may be superior
4.3 Preoxygenation Before Intubation
Advantages:
- Provides apneic oxygenation
- Delays desaturation
- Improves safe apnea time
Especially useful in:
- Obese patients
- Hypoxemic patients
- ARDS
4.4 Postoperative Hypoxemia
Useful after:
- Major abdominal surgery
- Thoracic surgery
- Cardiac surgery
Improves comfort compared to NIV.
4.5 Palliative / DNI Patients
HFNC:
- More comfortable than NIV
- Allows talking and eating
- Reduces dyspnea
5. Contraindications
Absolute:
- Immediate need for intubation
- Respiratory arrest
- Severe hemodynamic instability
- Altered sensorium with aspiration risk
Relative:
- Severe hypercapnic respiratory failure (unless mild and monitored)
- Facial trauma
HFNC is NOT first-line for severe COPD exacerbation with acidosis → NIV preferred.
6. HFNC vs NIV – Comparison
|
Feature |
HFNC |
NIV |
|
Interface |
Nasal cannula |
Tight mask |
|
PEEP |
Low (3–5 cm H₂O) |
Adjustable high PEEP |
|
CO₂ removal |
Mild |
Significant |
|
Tolerance |
Excellent |
Moderate |
|
Hypercapnia |
Limited role |
Strong evidence |
|
ARDS |
Good in mild–moderate |
Mixed results |
7. Starting Settings in ICU
Initial Settings:
- Flow: 40–60 L/min
- FiO₂: 1.0 initially in severe hypoxemia
- Temperature: 34–37°C
Then titrate:
- Target SpO₂: 92–96% (88–92% in COPD)
Higher flow = better PEEP + better washout.
8. Monitoring HFNC Therapy
Monitor:
- Respiratory rate
- Work of breathing
- SpO₂
- ABG
- Hemodynamics
8.1 ROX Index
ROX = (SpO₂ / FiO₂) ÷ Respiratory Rate
Interpretation:
- 4.88 at 12 hours → Success likely
- <3.85 → High failure risk
Derived from:
- ROX index study
Weaning from High-Flow Nasal Cannula
1. When to Consider Weaning?
Clinical Stability Criteria
Patient should have:
- RR < 22–24/min
- Minimal accessory muscle use
- Hemodynamic stability
- Improving primary pathology
- Stable mental status
- SpO₂ target achieved
Oxygenation Criteria
- FiO₂ ≤ 0.4–0.5
- SpO₂ ≥ 92–96% (88–92% in COPD)
- ROX index > 4.88
(ROX = [SpO₂/FiO₂] ÷ RR)
2. Core Principle: What to Reduce First?
Always reduce FiO₂ first, then flow.
Why?
- FiO₂ reduction confirms oxygenation recovery.
- Flow provides:
- Dead space washout
- Low-level PEEP
- Work-of-breathing reduction
If you reduce flow first → risk alveolar derecruitment.
3. Stepwise Weaning Protocol
Step 1 – Reduce FiO₂
If FiO₂ > 0.4:
- Reduce by 5–10% every 30–60 min
- Maintain target SpO₂
Target before moving to flow reduction:
- FiO₂ ≤ 0.4
Step 2 – Reduce Flow
Once FiO₂ ≤ 0.4:
- Reduce flow in steps of 5–10 L/min
- Reassess after each reduction (30–60 min)
Typical sequence:
- 60 → 50 → 40 → 35 → 30 L/min
Most patients tolerate 25–30 L/min before switching.
Step 3 – Transition to Conventional Oxygen
When:
- Flow ≤ 25–30 L/min
- FiO₂ ≤ 0.4
- RR stable
- Minimal distress
Switch to:
- Nasal prongs 2–5 L/min
- Venturi mask if controlled FiO₂ needed
Monitor closely for 1–2 hours after switch.

