Duncan, Daniel R., Growdon, Amanda S., Liu, Enju, Larson, Kara, Gonzalez, Madeline, Norris, Kerri, and Rosen, Rachel L.
OBJECTIVES: To determine if hospitalization, testing, diagnosis and management of suspected gastroesophageal reflux, and follow-up visits decreased since introduction of American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for brief resolved unexplained events (BRUE) s. STUDY DESIGN: We performed a retrospective cohort study of infants with BRUE evaluated at Boston Children’s Hospital in the year before and after guideline implementation to determine if practice patterns have changed. Outcomes included hospitalization rates, frequency of swallow assessments, other diagnostic testing, and reflux diagnoses, cost of care and number of repeat visits. Groups were compared based on whether they presented before or after guideline implementation. RESULTS: 359 subjects (186 pre-, 173 post-guidelines) were identified. There were no significant differences in practice patterns or outcomes before or after guideline implementation. Subjects had mean age 2.53±0.15 months and 80% were hospitalized for 2.49±0.26 days. Each subject had 2.47 diagnostic tests performed and 89% were noncontributory. Despite only13% having videofluoroscopic swallow study performed, 72% showed aspiration/penetration. No subject had gastroesophageal reflux testing, yet reflux was implicated as the cause for admission in 40% of subjects, resulting in increased odds of discharge on acid suppressing medications (OR 2.88, 95% CI 1.68-4.92, P = .0001). In follow-up, 28% of subjects had repeat hospitalizations or emergency room visits for persistent symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Infants with BRUE continue to undergo low-yield diagnostic testing and after admission remain symptomatic and frequently re-present to medical care. Swallow testing remains infrequent despite its high-yield, reflux continues to be implicated and children are still being discharged on acid suppression despite lack of efficacy.