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Natural history of pediatric intestinal failure: initial report from the Pediatric Intestinal Failure Consortium

Authors :
Robert H, Squires
Christopher, Duggan
Daniel H, Teitelbaum
Paul W, Wales
Jane, Balint
Robert, Venick
Susan, Rhee
Debra, Sudan
David, Mercer
J Andres, Martinez
Beth A, Carter
Jason, Soden
Simon, Horslen
Jeffrey A, Rudolph
Samuel, Kocoshis
Riccardo, Superina
Sharon, Lawlor
Tamara, Haller
Marcia, Kurs-Lasky
Steven H, Belle
Conrad, Cole
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 161(4)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Objective To characterize the natural history of intestinal failure (IF) among 14 pediatric centers during the intestinal transplantation era. Study design The Pediatric Intestinal Failure Consortium performed a retrospective analysis of clinical and outcome data for a multicenter cohort of infants with IF. Entry criteria included infants 60 continuous days. Enteral autonomy was defined as discontinuation of PN for >3 consecutive months. Values are presented as median (25th, 75th percentiles) or as number (%). Results 272 infants with a gestational age of 34 weeks (30, 36) and birth weight of 2.1 kg (1.2, 2.7) were followed for 25.7 months (11.2, 40.9). Residual small bowel length in 144 patients was 41 cm (25.0, 65.5). Diagnoses were necrotizing enterocolitis (71, 26%), gastroschisis (44, 16%), atresia (27, 10%), volvulus (24, 9%), combinations of these diagnoses (46, 17%), aganglionosis (11, 4%), and other single or multiple diagnoses (48, 18%). Prescribed medications included oral antibiotics (207, 76%), H2 blockers (187, 69%), and proton pump inhibitors (156, 57%). Enteral feeding approaches varied among centers; 19% of the cohort received human milk. The cohort experienced 8.9 new catheter-related blood stream infections per 1000 catheter days. The cumulative incidences for enteral autonomy, death, and intestinal transplantation were 47%, 27%, and 26%, respectively. Enteral autonomy continued into the fifth year after study entry. Conclusions Children with IF endure significant mortality and morbidity. Enteral autonomy may require years to achieve. Improved medical, nutritional, and surgical management may reduce time on PN, mortality, and need for transplantation.

Details

ISSN :
10976833
Volume :
161
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f30d8047dba6c3ab2fd00a0932051391