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Association of Early Steroid Administration With Outcomes of Children Hospitalized for COVID-19 Without Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children

Authors :
Tripathi, Sandeep
Nadiger, Meghana
McGarvey, Jeremy S.
Harthan, Aaron A.
Lombardo, Monica
Gharpure, Varsha P.
Perkins, Nicholas
Chiotos, Kathleen
Sayed, Imran A.
Bjornstad, Erica C.
Bhalala, Utpal S.
Raju, Umamaheswara
Miller, Aaron S.
Dapul, Heda
Montgomery, Vicki
Boman, Karen
Arteaga, Grace M.
Bansal, Vikas
Deo, Neha
Tekin, Aysun
Gajic, Ognjen
Kumar, Vishakha K.
Kashyap, Rahul
Walkey, Allan J.
Kovacevic, Tanja
Markic, Josko
Ardalic, Tatjana Capitovic
Polic, Branka
Ivić, Ivo
Carev, Dominko
Glavinic, Robert
Vadgaonkar, at al. Society of Critical Care Medicine Discovery Viral Infection and Respiratory Illness Universal Study (VIRUS): COVID-19 Registry Investigator Group
Source :
JAMA pediatrics.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

ImportanceThere is limited evidence for therapeutic options for pediatric COVID-19 outside of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C).ObjectiveTo determine whether the use of steroids within 2 days of admission for non–MIS-C COVID-19 in children is associated with hospital length of stay (LOS). The secondary objective was to determine their association with intensive care unit (ICU) LOS, inflammation, and fever defervescence.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsThis cohort study analyzed data retrospectively for children (ExposureAdministration of steroids within 2 days of admission.Main Outcomes and MeasuresLength of stay in the hospital and ICU. Adjustment for confounders was done by mixed linear regression and propensity score matching.ResultsA total of 1163 patients met inclusion criteria and had a median (IQR) age of 7 years (0.9-14.3). Almost half of all patients (601/1163, 51.7%) were male, 33.8% (392/1163) were non-Hispanic White, and 27.9% (324/1163) were Hispanic. Of the study population, 184 patients (15.8%) received steroids within 2 days of admission, and 979 (84.2%) did not receive steroids within the first 2 days. Among 1163 patients, 658 (56.5%) required respiratory support during hospitalization. Overall, patients in the steroids group were older and had greater severity of illness, and a larger proportion required respiratory and vasoactive support. On multivariable linear regression, after controlling for treatment with remdesivir within 2 days, country, race and ethnicity, obesity and comorbidity, number of abnormal inflammatory mediators, age, bacterial or viral coinfection, and disease severity according to ICU admission within first 2 days or World Health Organization ordinal scale of 4 or higher on admission, with a random intercept for the site, early steroid treatment was not significantly associated with hospital LOS (exponentiated coefficient, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.81-1.09; P = .42). Separate analyses for patients with an LOS of 2 days or longer (n = 729), those receiving respiratory support at admission (n = 286), and propensity score–matched patients also showed no significant association between steroids and LOS. Early steroid treatment was not associated with ICU LOS, fever defervescence by day 3, or normalization of inflammatory mediators.Conclusions and RelevanceSteroid treatment within 2 days of hospital admission in a heterogeneous cohort of pediatric patients hospitalized for COVID-19 without MIS-C did not have a statistically significant association with hospital LOS.

Details

ISSN :
21686211
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....13b113c60896447ba1fcb545e722d3eb