Department of Pediatrics, Children's National Health System and the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2018 Dec;19(12):1137-1145. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000001742.
Autopsy rates in North American Children's hospitals have not been recently evaluated. Our objectives were 1) to determine the autopsy rates from patients cared for in PICUs during a portion of their hospital stay, 2) to identify patient characteristics associated with autopsies, and 3) to understand the relative role of medical examiner cases.
Secondary analysis of data prospectively collected from a sample of patients (n = 10,078) admitted to PICUs affiliated with the Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network between December 2011 and April 2013.
Eight quaternary care PICUs.
Patients in the primary study were less than 18 years old, admitted to a PICU and not moribund on PICU admission. Patients included in this analysis were those who died during their hospital stay.
None.
Sociodemographic, clinical, hospital, and PICU data were compared between patients who had autopsies conducted and those who did not and between medical examiner and nonmedical examiner autopsies. Of 10,078 patients, 275 died of which 36% (n = 100) had an autopsy performed. Patients with cancer who died were less likely to receive autopsies (p = 0.005), whereas those who died after trauma or cardiac arrest had autopsies performed more often (p < 0.01). Autopsies were more common in patients with greater physiologic instability at admission (p < 0.001), and those who received more aggressive PICU care. Medical examiner cases comprised nearly half of all autopsies (n = 47; 47%) were conducted in patients presenting with greater physiologic instability (p < 0.001) and more commonly after catastrophic events such as cardiac arrest or trauma (p < 0.001).
In this first multicenter analysis of autopsy rates in children, 36% of deaths had autopsies conducted, of which nearly half were conducted by the medical examiner. Deaths with autopsy are more likely to be previously healthy children that had catastrophic events prior to admission.
北美儿童医院的尸检率最近尚未进行评估。我们的目的是:1)确定在儿科重症监护病房(PICU)住院期间部分患者的尸检率;2)确定与尸检相关的患者特征;3)了解法医案例的相对作用。
对 2011 年 12 月至 2013 年 4 月期间隶属于协作儿科危重病研究网络的 8 家四级保健 PICUs 中收治的患者(n=10078)进行前瞻性数据的二次分析。
8 个四级儿童 PICU。
主要研究中的患者年龄小于 18 岁,收入 PICU,入院时未病危。本分析中包括的患者是在住院期间死亡的患者。
无。
对尸检组和非尸检组患者、法医组和非法医组患者进行尸检的患者进行了社会人口统计学、临床、医院和 PICU 数据比较。在 10078 名患者中,275 名患者死亡,其中 36%(n=100)进行了尸检。癌症死亡患者尸检率较低(p=0.005),而创伤或心搏骤停后死亡患者尸检率较高(p<0.01)。入院时生理不稳定程度较高的患者(p<0.001)和接受更积极的 PICU 治疗的患者更常进行尸检。法医案例几乎占所有尸检(n=47;47%)的一半,这些患者的生理不稳定程度更高(p<0.001),更常见于心搏骤停或创伤等灾难性事件后(p<0.001)。
在这项对儿童尸检率的首次多中心分析中,36%的死亡患者进行了尸检,其中近一半由法医进行。进行尸检的死亡患者更可能是以前健康的儿童,在入院前发生了灾难性事件。