Department of Anesthesiology, Cathay General Hospital- Xizhi, New Taipei City, Taiwan.
Department of Anesthesiology, Cathay General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.
PLoS One. 2020 Sep 24;15(9):e0238289. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0238289. eCollection 2020.
Exposure to general anesthesia has been reported to induce neurotoxicity, impair learning, memory, attention, motor functions, as well as affect behavior in adult rodents and nonhuman primates. Though many have speculated similar effects in humans, previous literature has shown conflicting findings. To investigate the differences in risk of developmental delay among young children exposed to general anesthesia compared to matched unexposed individuals, a population-based cohort study was conducted with a longitudinal dataset spanning 2000 to 2013 from the Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD). Procedure codes were used to identify children who received anesthesia. For each exposed child, two unexposed children matched by gender and age were enrolled into the comparison cohort. Neurocognitive outcome was measured by the presence of ICD-9-CM codes related to developmental delay (DD). Cox regression models were used to obtain hazard ratios of developing DD after varying levels of anesthesia exposure. After excluding 4,802 individuals who met the exclusion criteria, a total of 11,457 children who received general anesthesia before two years of age was compared to 22,914 children (matched by gender and age) unexposed to anesthesia. Increased risk of DD was observed in the exposure group with a hazard ratio (HR) of 1.320 (95% CI 1.143-1.522, P < 0.001). Subgroup analysis demonstrated further elevated risks of DD with multiple anesthesia exposures (1 anesthesia event: HR 1.145, 95% CI 1.010-1.246, P = 0.04; 2 anesthesia events: HR 1.476, 95% CI 1.155-1.887, P = 0.005; ≥3 anesthesia events: HR 2.222, 95% CI 1.810-2.621, P < 0.001) and longer total anesthesia durations (Total anesthesia <2 hours: HR 1.124, 95% CI 1.003-1.499, P = 0.047; Total anesthesia 2-4 hours: HR 1.450, 95% CI 1.157-1.800, P = 0.004; Total anesthesia > 4 hours: HR 1.598, 95% CI 1.343-1.982, P < 0.001) compared with children unexposed to anesthesia. These results suggest that children exposed to general anesthesia before two years of age have an increased risk of DD. This risk is further elevated with increased frequency of anesthesia, and longer total anesthesia duration. The findings of this study should prompt clinical practitioners to proceed with caution when assessing young patients and planning managements involving procedures requiring general anesthesia.
全身麻醉暴露已被报道可诱导神经毒性,损害成年啮齿动物和非人类灵长类动物的学习、记忆、注意力、运动功能以及行为。尽管许多人推测人类也存在类似的影响,但以前的文献显示出相互矛盾的发现。为了研究与未暴露于全身麻醉的匹配个体相比,接受全身麻醉的幼儿出现发育迟缓的风险差异,一项基于人群的队列研究利用了 2000 年至 2013 年来自台湾全民健康保险研究数据库(NHIRD)的纵向数据集进行。使用程序代码来识别接受麻醉的儿童。对于每个暴露于麻醉的儿童,按照性别和年龄匹配两名未暴露于麻醉的儿童,将其纳入比较队列。使用与发育迟缓(DD)相关的 ICD-9-CM 代码来测量神经认知结果。使用 Cox 回归模型获得不同水平麻醉暴露后发生 DD 的风险比(HR)。在排除了 4802 名符合排除标准的个体后,共有 11457 名在两岁之前接受全身麻醉的儿童与 22914 名(按照性别和年龄匹配)未接受麻醉的儿童进行了比较。暴露组观察到发育迟缓的风险增加,风险比(HR)为 1.320(95%CI 1.143-1.522,P < 0.001)。亚组分析进一步显示,多次麻醉暴露的 DD 风险升高(1 次麻醉事件:HR 1.145,95%CI 1.010-1.246,P = 0.04;2 次麻醉事件:HR 1.476,95%CI 1.155-1.887,P = 0.005;≥3 次麻醉事件:HR 2.222,95%CI 1.810-2.621,P < 0.001)和总麻醉持续时间较长(总麻醉<2 小时:HR 1.124,95%CI 1.003-1.499,P = 0.047;总麻醉 2-4 小时:HR 1.450,95%CI 1.157-1.800,P = 0.004;总麻醉>4 小时:HR 1.598,95%CI 1.343-1.982,P < 0.001)与未暴露于麻醉的儿童相比。这些结果表明,两岁前接受全身麻醉的儿童发生 DD 的风险增加。这种风险随着麻醉频率的增加和总麻醉持续时间的延长而进一步升高。本研究结果应促使临床医生在评估年轻患者和计划涉及全身麻醉的手术管理时谨慎行事。