Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Pediatrics, Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA.
Crit Care Med. 2020 Aug;48(8):1120-1128. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000004380.
Acute respiratory failure is a common reason for admission to PICUs. Short- and long-term effects on pulmonary health in previously healthy children after acute respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation are unknown. The aim was to determine if clinical course or characteristics of mechanical ventilation predict persistent respiratory morbidity at follow-up.
Prospective cohort study with follow-up questionnaires at 6 and 12 months.
Ten U.S. PICUs.
Two-hundred fifty-five children were included in analysis after exclusion for underlying chronic disease or incomplete data. One-hundred fifty-eight and 130 children had follow-up data at 6 and 12 months, respectively.
None.
Pulmonary dysfunction at discharge a priori defined as one of: mechanical ventilation, supplemental oxygen, bronchodilators or steroids at 28 days or discharge. Persistent respiratory morbidity a priori defined as a respiratory PedsQL, a pediatric quality of life measure, greater than or equal to 5 or asthma diagnosis, bronchodilator or inhaled steroids, or unscheduled clinical evaluation for respiratory symptoms. Multivariate backward stepwise regression using Akaike information criterion minimization determined independent predictors of these outcomes. Pulmonary dysfunction at discharge was present in 34% of patients. Positive bacterial respiratory culture predicted pulmonary dysfunction at discharge (odds ratio, 4.38; 95% CI, 1.66-11.56). At 6- and 12-month follow-up 42% and 44% of responders, respectively, had persistent respiratory morbidity. Pulmonary dysfunction at discharge was associated with persistent respiratory morbidity at 6 months, and persistent respiratory morbidity at 6 months was strongly predictive of 12-month persistent respiratory morbidity (odds ratio, 18.58; 95% CI, 6.68-52.67). Positive bacterial respiratory culture remained predictive of persistent respiratory morbidity in patients at both follow-up points.
Persistent respiratory morbidity develops in up to potentially 44% of previously healthy children less than or equal to 24 months old at follow-up after acute respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation. This is the first study, to our knowledge, to suggest a prevalence of persistent respiratory morbidity and the association between positive bacterial respiratory culture and pulmonary morbidity in a population of only previously healthy children with acute respiratory failure.
急性呼吸衰竭是 PICUs 收治的常见原因。既往健康的儿童在因急性呼吸衰竭需要机械通气后,其肺部健康的短期和长期影响尚不清楚。本研究旨在确定临床过程或机械通气的特征是否可以预测随访时持续的呼吸发病率。
前瞻性队列研究,在 6 个月和 12 个月时进行随访问卷调查。
美国 10 个 PICUs。
255 名儿童因潜在慢性疾病或数据不完整而被排除在外后,纳入分析。158 名和 130 名儿童分别在 6 个月和 12 个月时进行了随访。
无。
预先定义为以下之一的出院时肺功能障碍:28 天或出院时机械通气、补充氧气、支气管扩张剂或类固醇。预先定义的持续呼吸道发病率为呼吸道 PedsQL(一种儿科生活质量衡量标准)大于或等于 5 分,或哮喘诊断、支气管扩张剂或吸入性类固醇,或因呼吸道症状而进行非计划的临床评估。使用赤池信息量准则最小化的多变量向后逐步回归确定了这些结果的独立预测因素。34%的患者出院时存在肺功能障碍。阳性细菌呼吸道培养预测出院时的肺功能障碍(比值比,4.38;95%CI,1.66-11.56)。在 6 个月和 12 个月的随访中,分别有 42%和 44%的应答者持续存在呼吸道发病率。出院时的肺功能障碍与 6 个月时的持续呼吸道发病率相关,而 6 个月时的持续呼吸道发病率强烈预测 12 个月时的持续呼吸道发病率(比值比,18.58;95%CI,6.68-52.67)。阳性细菌呼吸道培养在两个随访点均与持续呼吸道发病率相关。
在需要机械通气的急性呼吸衰竭后,24 个月以下的既往健康儿童中,多达 44%可能会出现持续的呼吸道发病率。据我们所知,这是第一项研究表明,在仅有急性呼吸衰竭的既往健康儿童人群中,细菌呼吸道培养阳性与肺部发病率之间存在相关性,并提示存在持续的呼吸道发病率。