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Sustainability of Infant Cardiac Surgery Early Extubation Practices After Implementation and Study

Authors :
Janet E. Donohue
Lara S. Shekerdemian
Madolin K. Witte
Susan C. Nicolson
Michael Wolf
Sara K. Pasquali
Michael Gaies
Wenying Zhang
William T. Mahle
Source :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. 107:1427-1433
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

The Pediatric Heart Network Collaborative Learning Study (PHN CLS) successfully changed practice at four hospitals to increase the rate of early extubation within 6 hours after infant heart surgery. It is unknown whether this practice continued after study completion.We linked the PHN CLS dataset to the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium registry to compare outcomes at four active hospitals between the study period (post-clinical practice guideline [CPG]) and the first year after study completion (follow-up) after a 3-month washout. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were the same across eras. Primary outcome was early extubation rate after tetralogy of Fallot or aortic coarctation repair. Secondary outcomes included time to first extubation and intensive care and hospital lengths of stay.There were 121 patients in the post-CPG era and 139 patients in the follow-up era with no difference in patient characteristics or operation subtypes. Post-CPG early extubation rate declined from 67% to 30% in follow-up (p0.0001); time to first extubation increased (4.5 versus 13.5 hours, p0.0001). One hospital maintained the rate of early extubation (72% versus 67%), whereas the other three hospitals had significantly lower rates in follow-up (p0.02 for each). Intensive care (2.8 versus 2.9 days) and postoperative hospital (6 versus 5 days) stays did not differ between eras (p0.05 for both). Findings were consistent across operation subtypes.Extubation practice in the first year of follow-up after the PHN CLS reverted toward prestudy levels. One of four hospitals maintained its early extubation strategy, suggesting that specific implementation and maintenance approaches may effectively sustain impact from quality initiatives.

Details

ISSN :
00034975
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef86ec868e4ed678d0ef2cc102797dd8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2018.09.024