Desai Yash, Marroquín Andrea, Hong-Zhu Paola, Knebusch Nicole, Vazquez Stephanie, Mansour Marwa, Fogarty Thomas P, Tcharmtchi M Hossein, Stein Fernando, Coss-Bu Jorge A
McGovern Medical School, UTHealth, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Division of Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Children (Basel). 2025 Mar 20;12(3):390. doi: 10.3390/children12030390.
Childhood malnutrition remains a risk factor for morbidity and mortality. Children admitted to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) are at a higher risk of worsening nutritional status with adverse clinical outcomes. The burden of malnutrition is strongly linked to various well-defined social determinants of health, including race, socioeconomic status, and geography, as these factors influence household food insecurity. This study aimed to analyze the interrelationships of nutritional status, social determinants of health, and health outcomes in critically ill children.
Retrospective cohort study of 6418 critically ill children admitted to PICU from January 2014 to December 2017. Demographic and anthropometric measurements were collected upon admission and outcomes. Based on the patient's zip code, and median household income, we estimated the percentage of the population living in poverty, and the percentage of the population experiencing food insecurity for 5912 children.
The prevalence of underweight, chronic, and acute malnutrition was 13.2%, 17.9%, and 5.6%, respectively. Malnourished children had longer duration of mechanical ventilation and longer PICU and hospital lengths of stay (LOS) compared to nourished children. Underweight and chronic malnutrition were associated with higher mortality. Hispanic children had the highest prevalence of poverty level, while non-Hispanic Black children had the highest food insecurity level and lowest median income. Ethnicity was not associated with mortality.
Malnourished critically ill children who were disproportionately non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, and Asian had worse hospital outcomes, including prolonged hospital and PICU length of stay, increased time on mechanical ventilation, and a higher risk of mortality.
儿童营养不良仍然是发病和死亡的风险因素。入住儿科重症监护病房(PICU)的儿童营养状况恶化及出现不良临床结局的风险更高。营养不良的负担与各种明确的健康社会决定因素密切相关,包括种族、社会经济地位和地理位置,因为这些因素会影响家庭粮食不安全状况。本研究旨在分析危重症儿童营养状况、健康社会决定因素和健康结局之间的相互关系。
对2014年1月至2017年12月入住PICU的6418名危重症儿童进行回顾性队列研究。入院时收集人口统计学和人体测量数据以及结局数据。根据患者的邮政编码和家庭收入中位数,我们估算了5912名儿童所在地区的贫困人口百分比和粮食不安全人口百分比。
体重不足、慢性和急性营养不良的患病率分别为13.2%、17.9%和5.6%。与营养良好的儿童相比,营养不良的儿童机械通气时间更长,PICU住院时间和住院总时长也更长。体重不足和慢性营养不良与较高的死亡率相关。西班牙裔儿童贫困水平患病率最高,而非西班牙裔黑人儿童粮食不安全水平最高且收入中位数最低。种族与死亡率无关。
营养不良的危重症儿童中,非西班牙裔黑人、西班牙裔和亚裔占比过高,他们的住院结局更差,包括住院和PICU住院时间延长、机械通气时间增加以及死亡风险更高。