Stone Bryan, Hester Gabrielle, Jackson Daniel, Richardson Troy, Hall Matt, Gouripeddi Ramkiran, Butcher Ryan, Keren Ron, Srivastava Rajendu
Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah;
Hospital Medicine, Children's Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Hosp Pediatr. 2017 Mar;7(3):140-148. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2016-0126. Epub 2017 Feb 3.
Gastroesophageal reflux (GER), aspiration, and secondary complications lead to morbidity and mortality in children with neurologic impairment (NI), dysphagia, and gastrostomy feeding. Fundoplication and gastrojejunal (GJ) feeding can reduce risk. We compared GJ to fundoplication using first-year postprocedure reflux-related hospitalization (RRH) rates.
We identified children with NI, dysphagia requiring gastrostomy tube feeding and GER undergoing initial GJ placement or fundoplication from January 1, 2007 to December 31, 2012. Data came from the Pediatric Health Information Systems augmented by laboratory, microbiology, and radiology results. GJ placement was ascertained using radiology results and fundoplication by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes. Subjects were matched within hospital using propensity scores. The primary outcome was first-year postprocedure RRH rate (hospitalization for GER disease, other esophagitis, aspiration pneumonia, other pneumonia, asthma, or mechanical ventilation). Secondary outcomes included failure to thrive, death, repeated initial intervention, crossover intervention, and procedural complications.
We identified 1178 children with fundoplication and 163 with GJ placement, matching 114 per group. Matched sample RRH incident rate per child-year (95% confidence interval) for GJ was 2.07 (1.62-2.64) and for fundoplication 1.67 (1.28-2.18), = .19. Odds of death were similar between groups. Failure to thrive, repeat of initial intervention, and crossover intervention were more common in the GJ group.
In children with NI, GER, and dysphagia: fundoplication and GJ feeding have similar RRH outcomes. Either intervention can reduce future aspiration risk; the choice can reflect non-RRH-related complication risks, caregiver preference, and clinician recommendation.
胃食管反流(GER)、误吸及继发并发症可导致神经功能障碍(NI)、吞咽困难及接受胃造口喂养的儿童出现发病和死亡情况。胃底折叠术和胃空肠(GJ)喂养可降低风险。我们比较了采用术后第一年反流相关住院率(RRH)的GJ喂养和胃底折叠术。
我们确定了2007年1月1日至2012年12月31日期间接受初次GJ置管或胃底折叠术的NI、吞咽困难需胃造口管喂养且有GER的儿童。数据来自儿科健康信息系统,并补充了实验室、微生物学和放射学结果。GJ置管通过放射学结果确定,胃底折叠术通过国际疾病分类第九版临床修订本编码确定。使用倾向得分在医院内对受试者进行匹配。主要结局是术后第一年的RRH率(因GER疾病、其他食管炎、误吸性肺炎、其他肺炎、哮喘或机械通气住院)。次要结局包括生长发育不良、死亡、重复初次干预、交叉干预和手术并发症。
我们确定了1178例行胃底折叠术的儿童和163例行GJ置管的儿童,每组匹配114例。GJ组每儿童年匹配样本RRH发生率(95%置信区间)为2.07(1.62 - 2.64),胃底折叠术组为1.67(1.28 - 2.18),P = 0.19。两组间死亡几率相似。生长发育不良、重复初次干预和交叉干预在GJ组更常见。
在患有NI、GER和吞咽困难的儿童中:胃底折叠术和GJ喂养的RRH结局相似。两种干预均可降低未来误吸风险;选择可反映与RRH无关的并发症风险、照料者偏好和临床医生建议。