Evers Katrina S, Wellmann Sven, Donner Birgit C, Ritz Nicole
University of Basel Children's Hospital (UKBB), Division of Paediatric Nephrology, Basel, Switzerland.
University of Basel Children's Hospital (UKBB), Division of Neonatology, Basel, Switzerland.
Swiss Med Wkly. 2021 Oct 22;151:w30026. doi: 10.4414/smw.2021.w30026. eCollection 2021 Oct 11.
Apparent life threatening events (ALTEs) are highly stressful situations for the caregiver and commonly result in presentation of the child to an emergency department. As the events are usually brief and resolve in a short period of time, the entity is now called a brief resolved unexplained event (BRUE). Updated recommendations have been published in recent years on the management of BRUE, including a risk stratification to identify those at lower risk for subsequent events or severe underlying disorders. The aim of this study was to describe the epidemiology of ALTE and BRUE at our hospital and detail clinical practice of management in this population in a tertiary care children's hospital in Switzerland.
We retrospectively analysed all cases of children with an ALTE or BRUE admitted to the University Children's Hospital Basel between September 2009 and April 2018, identified using ICD-10GM coding. Electronic health records were used to extract data on diagnostic procedures, duration of admission and outcome. Infants with a lower-risk BRUE (defined as age >60 days and <1year, born at ≥32 weeks gestational age and postconceptional age ≥45 weeks, first BRUE episode with a duration of <1 minute and no cardiopulmonary resuscitation by trained medical provider required) were compared with those with a higher-risk BRUE/ALTE (not fulfilling all the criteria for lower-risk BRUE).
A total of 65 patients with a median age of 42 days (interquartile range 20-67) were identified, of whom 15% were classified as having a lower-risk BRUE. A blood sample was analysed in 97% of patients, cranial ultrasound was performed in 63%, an electrocardiogram in 78% and polysomnography in 26%. The results remained normal in almost all patients and none had a further event recorded during admission. In one patient only QTc prolongation was detected as a potential serious underlying disease.
Our data show that admission for more than 24 hours and extensive investigations for infants admitted for an ALTE/BRUE rarely led to identification of specific underlying causes. According to current recommendations, 15% of the admitted patients could be categorised as having a lower-risk BRUE and therefore hospital admissions and investigations can safely be reduced. We propose an adaptation of the current Swiss recommendations for ALTE/BRUE to optimise clinical management of children presenting with a BRUE.
明显危及生命事件(ALTEs)对照顾者来说是极具压力的情况,通常会导致儿童前往急诊科就诊。由于这些事件通常很短暂且在短时间内就会缓解,现在该实体被称为短暂性不明原因事件(BRUE)。近年来已发布了关于BRUE管理的更新建议,包括进行风险分层以识别后续事件或严重潜在疾病风险较低的人群。本研究的目的是描述我院ALTE和BRUE的流行病学情况,并详细介绍瑞士一家三级儿童专科医院中该人群的临床管理实践。
我们回顾性分析了2009年9月至2018年4月期间入住巴塞尔大学儿童医院的所有ALTE或BRUE患儿病例,通过ICD - 10GM编码进行识别。利用电子健康记录提取诊断程序、住院时间和结局的数据。将低风险BRUE婴儿(定义为年龄>60天且<1岁,孕龄≥32周且孕后年龄≥45周,首次BRUE发作持续时间<1分钟且无需训练有素的医疗人员进行心肺复苏)与高风险BRUE/ALTE婴儿(不符合低风险BRUE的所有标准)进行比较。
共识别出65例患者,中位年龄为42天(四分位间距20 - 67),其中15%被归类为低风险BRUE。97%的患者进行了血液样本分析,63%进行了头颅超声检查,78%进行了心电图检查,26%进行了多导睡眠图检查。几乎所有患者的检查结果均正常,住院期间均未记录到进一步的事件。仅在1例患者中检测到QTc延长作为潜在的严重基础疾病。
我们的数据表明,因ALTE/BRUE入院超过24小时以及对这类婴儿进行广泛检查很少能确定具体的潜在病因。根据当前建议,15%的入院患者可归类为低风险BRUE,因此可以安全地减少住院和检查。我们建议对瑞士当前关于ALTE/BRUE的建议进行调整,以优化BRUE患儿的临床管理。