Badke Colleen M, Mayampurath Anoop, Sanchez-Pinto L Nelson
Division of Critical Care Medicine, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States.
Front Pediatr. 2022 Apr 25;10:874282. doi: 10.3389/fped.2022.874282. eCollection 2022.
Multiple organ dysfunction (MOD) is a common pathway to morbidity and death in critically ill children. Defining organ dysfunction is challenging, as we lack a complete understanding of the complex pathobiology. Current pediatric organ dysfunction criteria assign the same diagnostic value-the same "weight"- to each organ system. While each organ dysfunction in isolation contributes to the outcome, there are likely complex interactions between multiple failing organs that are not simply additive.
Determine whether certain combinations of organ system dysfunctions have a significant interaction associated with higher risk of morbidity or mortality in critically ill children.
We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study of critically ill children at two large academic medical centers from 2010 and 2018. Patients were included in the study if they had at least two organ dysfunctions by day 3 of PICU admission based on the Pediatric Organ Dysfunction Information Update Mandate (PODIUM) criteria. Mortality was described as absolute number of deaths and mortality rate. Combinations of two pediatric organ dysfunctions were analyzed with interaction terms as independent variables and mortality or persistent MOD as the dependent variable in logistic regression models.
Overall, 7,897 patients met inclusion criteria and 446 patients (5.6%) died. The organ dysfunction interactions that were significantly associated with the highest absolute number of deaths were cardiovascular + endocrinologic, cardiovascular + neurologic, and cardiovascular + respiratory. Additionally, the interactions associated with the highest mortality rates were liver + cardiovascular, respiratory + hematologic, and respiratory + renal. Among patients with persistent MOD, the most common organ dysfunctions with significant interaction terms were neurologic + respiratory, hematologic + immunologic, and endocrinologic + respiratory. Further analysis using classification and regression trees (CART) demonstrated that the absence of respiratory and liver dysfunction was associated with the lowest likelihood of mortality.
Certain combinations of organ dysfunctions are associated with a higher risk of persistent MOD or death. Notably, the three most common organ dysfunction interactions were associated with 75% of the mortality in our cohort. Critically ill children with MOD presenting with these combinations of organ dysfunctions warrant further study.
多器官功能障碍(MOD)是危重症儿童发病和死亡的常见途径。由于我们对复杂的病理生物学缺乏全面了解,因此定义器官功能障碍具有挑战性。当前的儿科器官功能障碍标准赋予每个器官系统相同的诊断价值——相同的“权重”。虽然孤立的每个器官功能障碍都会影响预后,但多个功能衰竭器官之间可能存在复杂的相互作用,而不仅仅是简单的叠加。
确定某些器官系统功能障碍的组合是否与危重症儿童更高的发病或死亡风险存在显著相互作用。
我们对2010年至2018年期间两家大型学术医疗中心的危重症儿童进行了一项回顾性观察队列研究。根据儿科器官功能障碍信息更新指令(PODIUM)标准,如果患者在儿科重症监护病房(PICU)入院第3天时至少有两种器官功能障碍,则纳入本研究。死亡率以死亡绝对数和死亡率来描述。在逻辑回归模型中,将两种儿科器官功能障碍的组合作为自变量,以交互项进行分析,将死亡率或持续性MOD作为因变量。
总体而言,7897例患者符合纳入标准,446例患者(5.6%)死亡。与最高死亡绝对数显著相关的器官功能障碍相互作用为心血管 + 内分泌、心血管 + 神经和心血管 + 呼吸。此外,与最高死亡率相关的相互作用为肝脏 + 心血管、呼吸 + 血液和呼吸 + 肾脏。在持续性MOD患者中,具有显著交互项的最常见器官功能障碍为神经 + 呼吸、血液 + 免疫和内分泌 + 呼吸。使用分类与回归树(CART)进行的进一步分析表明,无呼吸和肝功能障碍与最低死亡可能性相关。
某些器官功能障碍的组合与持续性MOD或死亡的较高风险相关。值得注意的是,三种最常见的器官功能障碍相互作用与我们队列中75%的死亡率相关。患有这些器官功能障碍组合的MOD危重症儿童值得进一步研究。