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Introduction of severe traumatic brain injury care protocol is associated with reduction in mortality for pediatric patients: a case study of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta’s neurotrauma program

Authors :
Natalie Tillman
Atul Vats
Zaev D. Suskin
Eric A. Sribnick
Karen Walson
Toni Petrillo-Albarano
Joshua J. Chern
Andrew T. Reisner
Laura S Blackwell
Chia-Yi Kuan
Source :
Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics. 22:165-172
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG), 2018.

Abstract

OBJECTIVEEvidence shows mixed efficacy of applying guidelines for the treatment of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in children. A multidisciplinary team at a children’s health system standardized intensive care unit–based TBI care using guidelines and best practices. The authors sought to investigate the impact of guideline implementation on outcomes.METHODSA multidisciplinary group developed a TBI care protocol based on published TBI treatment guidelines and consensus, which was implemented in March 2011. The authors retrospectively compared preimplementation outcomes (May 2009 to March 2011) and postimplementation outcomes (April 2011 to March 2014) among patients < 18 years of age admitted with severe TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale score ≤ 8) and potential survivability who underwent intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring. Measures included mortality, hospital length of stay (LOS), ventilator LOS, critical ICP elevation time (percentage or total time that ICP was > 40 mm Hg), and survivor functionality at discharge (measured by the WeeFIM score). Data were analyzed using Student t-tests.RESULTSA total of 71 and 121 patients were included pre- and postimplementation, respectively. Mortality (32% vs 19%; p < 0.001) and length of critical ICP elevation (> 20 mm Hg; 26.3% vs 15%; p = 0.001) decreased after protocol implementation. WeeFIM discharge scores were not statistically different (57.6 vs 58.9; p = 0.9). Hospital LOS (median 19.6 days; p = 0.68) and ventilator LOS (median 10 days; p = 0.24) were unchanged.CONCLUSIONSA multidisciplinary effort to develop, disseminate, and implement an evidence-based TBI treatment protocol at a children’s hospital was associated with improved outcomes, including survival and reduced time of ICP elevation. This type of ICP-based protocol can serve as a guide for other institutions looking to reduce practice disparity in the treatment of severe TBI.

Details

ISSN :
19330715 and 19330707
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....90797f5a665a430d5180c4043efcad1e