Johnson Joyce T, Tani Lloyd Y, Puchalski Michael D, Bardsley Tyler R, Byrne Janice L B, Minich L LuAnn, Pinto Nelangi M
Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Primary Children's Hospital and the University of Utah, 100 N. Mario Capecchi Drive, Salt Lake City, UT, 84113, USA,
Pediatr Cardiol. 2014 Dec;35(8):1370-8. doi: 10.1007/s00246-014-0939-x. Epub 2014 Jun 4.
Many factors in the delivery and perinatal care of infants with a prenatal diagnosis of congenital heart disease (CHD) have an impact on outcome and costs. This study sought to determine the modifiable factors in perinatal management that have an impact on postnatal resource use for infants with CHD. The medical records of infants with prenatally diagnosed CHD (August 2006-December 2011) who underwent cardiac surgery before discharge were reviewed. The exclusion criteria ruled out prematurity and intervention or transplantation evaluation before surgery. Clinical characteristics, outcomes, and cost data were collected. Multivariate linear regression models were used to determine the impact of perinatal decisions on hospitalization cost and surrogates of resource use after adjustment for demographic and other risk factors. For the 126 patients who met the study criteria, the median hospital stay was 22 days (range 4-122 days), and the median inflation-adjusted total hospital cost was $107,357 (range $9,746-602,320). The initial admission to the neonatal versus the cardiac intensive care unit (NICU vs. CICU) was independently associated with a 19 % longer hospital stay, a 26 % longer ICU stay, and 47 % more mechanical ventilation days after adjustment for Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery, version 1 score, gestation age, genetic abnormality, birth weight, mode of delivery, and postsurgical complications. Weekend versus weekday delivery was not associated with hospital cost or length of hospital stay. For term infants with prenatally diagnosed CHD undergoing surgery before discharge, preoperative admission to the NICU (vs. the CICU) resulted in a longer hospital stay and greater intensive care use. Prenatal planning for infants with CHD should consider the initial place of admission as a modifiable factor for potential lowering of resource use.
在对产前诊断为先天性心脏病(CHD)的婴儿进行分娩及围产期护理时,许多因素会影响其预后及成本。本研究旨在确定围产期管理中那些可改变的因素,这些因素会对CHD婴儿出生后的资源利用产生影响。我们回顾了2006年8月至2011年12月期间产前诊断为CHD且在出院前接受心脏手术的婴儿的病历。排除标准排除了早产以及手术前的干预或移植评估。收集了临床特征、预后及成本数据。在对人口统计学和其他风险因素进行调整后,使用多变量线性回归模型来确定围产期决策对住院成本及资源利用替代指标的影响。对于符合研究标准的126例患者,中位住院时间为22天(范围4 - 122天),经通胀调整后的中位总住院成本为107,357美元(范围9,746 - 602,320美元)。在对先天性心脏病手术风险调整版本1评分、胎龄、基因异常、出生体重、分娩方式及术后并发症进行调整后,最初入住新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)而非心脏重症监护病房(CICU)与住院时间延长19%、重症监护病房停留时间延长26%以及机械通气天数增加47%独立相关。周末分娩与工作日分娩相比,与住院成本或住院时间无关。对于产前诊断为CHD且在出院前接受手术的足月儿,术前入住NICU(而非CICU)会导致住院时间延长及重症监护使用增加。对于CHD婴儿的产前规划应将最初的入院地点视为一个可改变的因素,以潜在降低资源利用。