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Impact of prematurity on long-stay paediatric intensive care unit admissions in England 2008-2018

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posted on 2023-09-04, 15:00 authored by Tim Van Hasselt, Hari Krishnan Kanthimathinathan, Trishul Kothari, Chris Gale, Elizabeth Draper, Sarah Seaton

Background

Survival following extreme preterm birth has improved, potentially increasing the number of children with ongoing morbidity requiring intensive care in childhood. Previous single-centre studies have suggested that long-stay admissions in paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) are increasing.


We aimed to examine trends in long-stay admissions (≥28 days) to PICUs in England, outcomes for this group (including mortality and PICU readmission), and to determine the contribution of preterm-born children to the long-stay population, in children aged <2 years.


Methods

Data was obtained from the Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network (PICANet) for all children <2 years admitted to National Health Service PICUs from 1/1/2008 to 31/12/2018 in England. We performed descriptive analysis of child characteristics and PICU outcomes.


Results

There were 99,057 admissions from 67,615 children. 2,693 children (4.0%) had 3,127 long-stays. Between 2008 and 2018 the annual number of long-stay admissions increased from 225 (2.7%) to 355 (4.0%), and the proportion of bed days in PICUs occupied by long-stay admissions increased from 24.2% to 33.2%.


Of children with long-stays, 33.5% were born preterm, 53.5% were born at term, and 13.1% had missing data for gestational age.


A considerable proportion of long-stay children required PICU readmission before two years of age (76.3% for preterm-born children). Observed mortality during any admission was also disproportionately greater for long-stay children (26.5% for term-born, 24.8% for preterm-born) than the overall rate (6.3%).


Conclusions

Long-stays accounted for an increasing proportion of PICU activity in England between 2008 and 2018. Children born preterm were over-represented in the long-stay population compared to the national preterm birth rate (8%).


These results have significant implications for future research into paediatric morbidity, and for planning future PICU service provision.

Funding

PREM-PIC - Potential Risk of childrEn born preMature requiring Paediatric Intensive Care: Examining risks of critical illness, and trends in paediatric intensive care utilisation for children born premature.

NIHR Academy

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Understanding the epidemiology, experiences and variation in the transition from neonatal to paediatric care: a mixed methods study

National Institute for Health Research

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History

Author affiliation

Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMC Pediatrics

Volume

23

Issue

421

Publisher

BMC

issn

1471-2431

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-09-04

Language

en

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