16 results on '"Domnina Y"'
Search Results
2. Associations of Perioperative Renal Oximetry Via Near-Infrared Spectroscopy, Urinary Biomarkers, and Postoperative Acute Kidney Injury in Infants After Congenital Heart Surgery: Should Creatinine Continue to Be the Gold Standard?
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Adams PS, Vargas D, Baust T, Saenz L, Koh W, Blasiole B, Callahan PM, Phadke AS, Nguyen KN, Domnina Y, Sharma M, Kellum JA, and Sanchez-de-Toledo J
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Examine the relationship between perioperative renal regional tissue oximetry, urinary biomarkers, and acute kidney injury in infants after congenital cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. DESIGN: Prospective, observational. SETTING: Cardiac operating room and cardiac ICU. PATIENTS: Neonates and infants without history of kidney injury or anatomic renal abnormality. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Renal regional tissue oximetry was measured intraoperatively and for 48 hours postoperatively. Urinary levels of neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 2 together with insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 were measured preoperatively, 2, 12, and 24 hours postoperatively. Patients were categorized as no acute kidney injury, stage 1, or Stage 2-3 acute kidney injury using the Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes criteria with 43 of 70 (61%) meeting criteria for any stage acute kidney injury. Stage 2-3 acute kidney injury patients had higher tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 2, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 at 2 hours (0.3 vs 0.14 for stage 1 acute kidney injury and 0.05 for no acute kidney injury; p = 0.052) and 24 hours postoperatively (1.71 vs 0.27 for stage 1 acute kidney injury and 0.19 for no acute kidney injury, p = 0.027) and higher neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin levels at 24 hours postoperatively (10.3 vs 3.4 for stage 1 acute kidney injury and 6.2 for no acute kidney injury, p = 0.019). Stage 2-3 acute kidney injury patients had lower mean cardiac ICU renal regional tissue oximetry (66% vs 79% for stage 1 acute kidney injury and 84% for no acute kidney injury, p = 0.038). Regression analyses showed that tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 2, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 at 2 hours postoperatively and nadir intraoperative renal regional tissue oximetry to be independent predictors of postoperative kidney damage as measured by urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin. CONCLUSIONS: We observed modest differences in perioperative renal regional tissue oximetry and urinary biomarker levels compared between acute kidney injury groups classified by creatinine-dependent Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes criteria, but there were significant correlations between renal regional tissue oximetry, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 2, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7, and postoperative neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin levels. Kidney injury after infant cardiac surgery may be undetectable by functional assessment (creatinine) alone, and continuous monitoring of renal regional tissue oximetry may be more sensitive to important subclinical acute kidney injury.
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- 2019
3. Serum Neuronal Biomarkers in Neonates With Congenital Heart Disease Undergoing Cardiac Surgery
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Trakas E, Domnina Y, Panigrahy A, Baust T, Callahan PM, Morell VO, Munoz R, Bell MJ, and Sanchez-de-Toledo J
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neonatal ,pediatric ,s100B ,biomarkers ,congenital heart disease ,cranial ultrasound ,neurodevelopmental outcomes ,neuron-specific enolase - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Newborns with congenital heart disease have associated brain damage that affects short-and long-term neurodevelopment. Several neuronal biomarkers exist that could predict brain damage. We investigated the pattern of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and s100B levels after cardiopulmonary bypass surgery in neonates with congenital heart disease. METHODS: We completed a prospective observational study of neonates with congenital heart disease who were undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. NSE and s100B levels were measured from serum samples obtained preoperatively, immediately postoperatively, and once daily on postoperative days one to seven. Cranial ultrasounds were obtained preoperatively and postoperatively and findings were scored using an internally developed scoring system. RESULTS: Eighteen neonates were included. Immediate postoperative and peak levels of both NSE (58.0 [21.6] and 68.1 [55.7] µg/L) and s100B (0.14 [0.3] and 0.14 [0.3] µg/L) were significantly increased when compared with preoperative levels (34.0 [21.6] µg/L; P
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- 2017
4. Brain Dysplasia Associated with Ciliary Dysfunction in Infants with Congenital Heart Disease
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Panigrahy A, Lee V, Ceschin R, Zuccoli G, Beluk N, Khalifa O, Votava-Smith JK, DeBrunner M, Munoz R, Domnina Y, Morell V, Wearden P, Sanchez-de-Toledo J, Devine W, Zahid M, and Lo CW
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- 2016
5. Treatment and follow-up of venous thrombosis in the neonatal intensive care unit: a retrospective study
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Bohnhoff, J C, primary, DiSilvio, S A, additional, Aneja, R K, additional, Shenk, J R, additional, Domnina, Y A, additional, Brozanski, B S, additional, and Good, M, additional
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- 2016
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6. Coronary arterial Aspergillosis.
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Baird CW, Banks P, Domnina Y, Baird, Christopher W, Banks, Peter, and Domnina, Yuliya
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- 2011
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7. Sustained Performance of Cardiac Arrest Prevention in Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Units.
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Mueller D, Bailly DK, Banerjee M, Bertrandt RA, Borasino S, Briceno-Medina M, Chan T, Diddle JW, Domnina Y, Clarke-Myers K, Connelly C, Florez A, Gaies M, Garza J, Ghassemzadeh R, Lane J, McCammond AN, Olive MK, Ortmann L, Prodhan P, Raymond TT, Sasaki J, Scahill C, Schroeder LW, Schumacher KR, Werho DK, Zhang W, and Alten J
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- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Child, Infant, Incidence, Cohort Studies, Infant, Newborn, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Heart Arrest prevention & control, Heart Arrest epidemiology, Quality Improvement
- Abstract
Importance: The Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium (PC4) cardiac arrest prevention (CAP) quality improvement (QI) project facilitated a decreased in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) incidence rate across multiple hospitals. The sustainability of this outcome has not been determined., Objective: To examine the IHCA incidence rate at participating hospitals after the QI project ended and discern which factors best aligned with sustained improvement., Design, Setting, and Participants: This observational cohort study compared IHCA data from the CAP era (July 1, 2018, to December 31, 2019) with data from the 2-year follow-up era (March 1, 2020, to February 28, 2022). Data were obtained from pediatric cardiac intensive care units (CICUs) from 17 PC4 CAP-participating hospitals., Intervention: The CAP practice bundle was designed to facilitate local practice integration, with the intention to implement, adapt, and continue CAP processes beyond the CAP era. A web-based survey was administered 2 years after the end of the project to estimate CAP-specific QI work., Main Outcomes and Measures: Risk-adjusted IHCA incidence rates across all admissions were compared between study eras. The survey generated a novel hospital-specific QI sustainability score, which is generally reflective of the sum of local CAP work performed., Results: There were no clinically important differences in demographic and admission characteristics between the 13 082 CAP era admissions and 16 284 follow-up admissions (total mean [SD] age, 5.1 [8.4] years; 56.1% male). Risk-adjusted IHCA incidences were not different between the CAP vs follow-up eras (2.8% vs 2.8%; odds ratio, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.89-1.19), suggesting sustained prevention improvement. There was also no difference between eras in risk-adjusted IHCA incidence within medical, surgical, or high-risk subgroups. A lower hospital QI sustainability score was correlated with higher odds for IHCA in the follow-up vs CAP era (correlation coefficient, -0.58; P = .02). Five hospitals had increases of 1% or greater in risk-adjusted IHCA rates in the follow-up era; these hospitals had significantly lower QI sustainability scores and were less likely to have adopted sustainability elements during the CAP era or report persistent engagement for CAP-related QI processes during follow-up., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study of all CICU admissions across 17 hospitals, IHCA prevention was feasible and sustainable; the established reduction in risk-adjusted IHCA rate was maintained for at least 2 years after the end of the CAP project. Both implementation strategies and continued engagement in CAP processes during the follow-up era were associated with sustained improvement.
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- 2024
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8. Association Between Persistent Hypothermia After Cardiopulmonary Bypass in Neonates and Odds of Serious Complications.
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Helman SM, Sereika S, Hravnak M, Henker R, Gaynor JW, Herrup E, Olsen R, Kochanek PM, Ghassemzadeh R, Baust T, Riek NT, Domnina Y, Lisanti AJ, and Al-Zaiti S
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- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Retrospective Studies, Male, Female, Risk Factors, Cohort Studies, Cardiopulmonary Bypass adverse effects, Hypothermia etiology, Hypothermia epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery
- Abstract
Importance: Persistent hypothermia after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) in neonates with congenital heart defects (CHD) has been historically considered benign despite lack of evidence on its prognostic significance., Objectives: Examine associations between the magnitude and pattern of unintentional postoperative hypothermia and odds of complications in neonates with CHD undergoing CPB., Design: Retrospective cohort study., Setting: Single northeastern U.S., urban pediatric quaternary care center with an established cardiac surgery program., Participants: Population-based sample of neonates greater than or equal to 34 weeks gestation undergoing their first CPB between 2015 and 2019., Interventions: None., Main Outcomes and Measurements: Hourly temperature measurements for the first 48 postoperative hours were extracted from inpatient medical records, and clinical characteristics and outcomes were accessed through the local patient registry. Group-based trajectory modeling (GBTM) identified latent temporal temperature trajectories. Associations of trajectories with outcomes were assessed using multivariable binary logistic regression. Outcomes (postoperative complications) were manually adjudicated by experts or were predefined by the patient registry., Results: Four hundred fifty neonates met inclusion criteria. Their mean (sd) gestational age was 38 weeks (1.3), mean (sd) birth weight was 3.19 kilograms (0.55), median (interquartile range) surgical age was 4.7 days (3.3-7.0), 284 of 450 (63%) were male, and 272 of 450 (60%) were White. GBTM identified three distinct curvilinear temperature trajectories: persistent hypothermia (n = 38, 9%), resolving hypothermia (n = 233, 52%), and normothermia (n = 179, 40%). Compared with the normothermic group, those with persistent hypothermia had significantly higher odds of cardiac arrest, actionable arrhythmia, delayed first successful extubation, prolonged cardiac ICU length of stay, very poor weight gain, and 30-day hospital mortality. The persistent hypothermia group was characterized by greater odds of having a lower gestational age, more prevalent neurologic abnormalities, more unplanned reoperations, and a low surgical mortality risk assessment., Conclusions: Persistent postoperative hypothermia in neonates after CPB is independently associated with having greater odds of complications. Recovery patterns from postoperative hypothermia may be a clinically useful marker to identify patient instability in neonates. Additional research is needed for causal modeling and prospective validation before clinical adoption., Competing Interests: Dr. Henker is a member of the Critical Care Explorations editorial board. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.)
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- 2024
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9. Epidemiology of Postoperative Junctional Ectopic Tachycardia in Infants Undergoing Cardiac Surgery.
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Kim ME, Baskar S, Janson CM, Chandler SF, Whitehill RD, Dionne A, Law MA, Domnina Y, Smith-Parrish MN, Bird GL, Banerjee M, Zhang W, Reichle G, Schumacher KR, Czosek RJ, Morales DLS, and Alten JA
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Infant, Female, Male, Infant, Newborn, Incidence, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, Tachycardia, Ectopic Junctional epidemiology, Tachycardia, Ectopic Junctional etiology, Cardiac Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery
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Background: Junctional ectopic tachycardia (JET) complicates congenital heart surgery in 2% to 8.3% of cases. JET is associated with postoperative morbidity in single-center studies. We used the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium data registry to provide a multicenter epidemiologic description of treated JET., Methods: This is a retrospective study (February 2019-August 2022) of patients with treated JET. Inclusion criteria were (1) <12 months old at the index operation, and (2) treated for JET <72 hours after surgery. Diagnosis was defined by receiving treatment (pacing, cooling, and medications). A multilevel logistic regression analysis with hospital random effect identified JET risk factors. Impact of JET on outcomes was estimated by margins/attributable risk analysis using previous risk-adjustment models., Results: Among 24,073 patients from 63 centers, 1436 (6.0%) were treated for JET with significant center variability (0% to 17.9%). Median time to onset was 3.4 hours, with 34% present on admission. Median duration was 2 days (interquartile range, 1-4 days). Tetralogy of Fallot, atrioventricular canal, and ventricular septal defect repair represented >50% of JET. Patient characteristics independently associated with JET included neonatal age, Asian race, cardiopulmonary bypass time, open sternum, and early postoperative inotropic agents. JET was associated with increased risk-adjusted durations of mechanical ventilation (incidence rate ratio, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.5-1.7) and intensive care unit length of stay (incidence rate ratio, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.2-1.3), but not mortality., Conclusions: JET is treated in 6% of patients with substantial center variability. JET contributes to increased use of postoperative resources. High center variability warrants further study to identify potential modifiable factors that could serve as targets for improvement efforts to ameliorate deleterious outcomes., (Copyright © 2024 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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10. Racial and Ethnic Variation in ECMO Utilization and Outcomes in Pediatric Cardiac ICU Patients.
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Brunetti MA, Griffis HM, O'Byrne ML, Glatz AC, Huang J, Schumacher KR, Bailly DK, Domnina Y, Lasa JJ, Moga MA, Zaccagni H, Simsic JM, and Gaynor JW
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies have reported racial disparities in extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) utilization in pediatric cardiac patients., Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine if there was racial/ethnic variation in ECMO utilization and, if so, whether mortality was mediated by differences in ECMO utilization., Methods: This is a multicenter, retrospective cohort study of the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium clinical registry. Analyses were stratified by hospitalization type (medical vs surgical). Logistic regression models were adjusted for confounders and evaluated the association between race/ethnicity with ECMO utilization and mortality. Secondary analyses explored interactions between race/ethnicity, insurance, and socioeconomic status with ECMO utilization and mortality., Results: A total of 50,552 hospitalizations from 34 hospitals were studied. Across all hospitalizations, 2.9% (N = 1,467) included ECMO. In medical and surgical hospitalizations, Black race and Hispanic ethnicity were associated with severity of illness proxies. In medical hospitalizations, race/ethnicity was not associated with the odds of ECMO utilization. Hospitalizations of other race had higher odds of mortality (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 1.61; 95% CI: 1.22-2.12; P = 0.001). For surgical hospitalizations, Black (aOR: 1.24; 95% CI: 1.02-1.50; P = 0.03) and other race (aOR: 1.50; 95% CI: 1.17-1.93; P = 0.001) were associated with higher odds of ECMO utilization. Hospitalizations of Hispanic patients had higher odds of mortality (aOR: 1.31; 95% CI: 1.03-1.68; P = 0.03). No significant interactions were demonstrated between race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status indicators with ECMO utilization or mortality., Conclusions: Black and other races were associated with increased ECMO utilization during surgical hospitalizations. There were racial/ethnic disparities in outcomes not explained by differences in ECMO utilization. Efforts to mitigate these important disparities should include other aspects of care., Competing Interests: This study was funded in part by funding from the 10.13039/100007270University of Michigan Congenital Heart Center, CHAMPS for Mott, and the 10.13039/100008269Michigan Institute for Clinical & Health Research (10.13039/100000002NIH/10.13039/100006108NCATS UL1TR002240). Dr O'Byrne has received support from 10.13039/100000050NHLBI/10.13039/100000002NIH (K23 HL130420-01). The funding agencies had no role in the planning or execution of the study, nor did they edit the manuscript as presented. The project and resulting manuscript were reviewed by the PC4 Scientific Review Committee, but the manuscript represents the opinions of the authors alone. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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11. Predictors of Mediastinal Exploration While on Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation After Pediatric Cardiac Surgery.
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Kerstein JS, Adams PS, Maul TM, Stebler J, Baust T, Saenz L, Albert O, Palmer D, Morell VO, and Domnina Y
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- Child, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Heart, Hemorrhage etiology, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation adverse effects, Cardiac Surgical Procedures adverse effects
- Abstract
Cardiac surgical patients requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) are at increased risk for hemorrhage due to necessary anticoagulation, in-situ cannulas, and disturbed hemostasis. We performed a retrospective, cross-sectional study of patients 0-18 years old in our cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) cannulated to ECMO within 48 h of cardiopulmonary bypass. The 69 patients included in the study were divided into three analysis groups based on serial chest tube output per hour: no bleeding (NB) on admission to the CICU (21/69, 30%), bleeding stopped (BS) with medical management (26/69, 38%), bleeding requiring emergent mediastinal exploration (BME) (22/69, 32%). The NB group had a more favorable coagulation profile upon admission to the CICU (PTT 53 s NB, 105 s BS, 83 s BME p < 0.001, ACT 169 s NB, 225 s BS, 211 s BME, p =0.013). Only chest tube output during the first three postcannulation hours remained associated with the need for mediastinal exploration by multivariable analysis. An average chest-tube output of 11.6 mL/kg/h during the first three hours had the highest percentage of patients classified correctly (84%) for requiring mediastinal exploration during their ECMO run (sensitivity 91%, specificity 81%)., Competing Interests: Disclosure: There are no funding or conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © ASAIO 2022.)
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- 2023
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12. Preventing Cardiac Arrest in the Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Unit Through Multicenter Collaboration.
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Alten J, Cooper DS, Klugman D, Raymond TT, Wooton S, Garza J, Clarke-Myers K, Anderson J, Pasquali SK, Absi M, Affolter JT, Bailly DK, Bertrandt RA, Borasino S, Dewan M, Domnina Y, Lane J, McCammond AN, Mueller DM, Olive MK, Ortmann L, Prodhan P, Sasaki J, Scahill C, Schroeder LW, Werho DK, Zaccagni H, Zhang W, Banerjee M, and Gaies M
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- Child, Hospital Mortality, Hospitalization, Hospitals, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Critical Illness, Heart Arrest epidemiology, Heart Arrest prevention & control
- Abstract
Importance: Preventing in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) likely represents an effective strategy to improve outcomes for critically ill patients, but feasibility of IHCA prevention remains unclear., Objective: To determine whether a low-technology cardiac arrest prevention (CAP) practice bundle decreases IHCA rate., Design, Setting, and Participants: Pediatric cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) teams from the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium (PC4) formed a collaborative learning network to implement the CAP bundle consistent with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement framework; 15 hospitals implemented the bundle voluntarily. Risk-adjusted IHCA incidence rates were analyzed across 2 time periods, 12 months (baseline) and 18 months after CAP implementation (intervention) using difference-in-differences (DID) regression to compare 15 CAP and 16 control PC4 hospitals that chose not to participate in CAP but had IHCA rates tracked in the PC4 registry. Patients deemed at high risk for IHCA, based on a priori evidence-based criteria and empirical hospital-specific criteria, were selected to receive the CAP bundle. Data were collected from July 2018 to December 2019, and data were analyzed from March to August 2020., Interventions: CAP bundle included 5 elements developed to promote increased situational awareness and communication among bedside clinicians to recognize and mitigate deterioration in high-risk patients., Main Outcomes and Measures: Risk-adjusted IHCA incidence rate across all CICU admissions (IHCA events divided by all admissions)., Results: The bundle was activated in 2664 of 10 510 CAP hospital admissions (25.3%); admission characteristics were similar across study periods. There was a 30% relative reduction in risk-adjusted IHCA incidence rate at CAP hospitals (intervention period: 2.6%; 95% CI, 2.2-2.9; baseline: 3.7%; 95% CI, 3.1-4.0), but no change at control hospitals (intervention period: 2.7%; 95% CI, 2.3-2.9; baseline: 2.7%; 95% CI, 2.2-3.0). DID analysis confirmed significantly reduced odds of IHCA among all admissions at CAP hospitals compared with control hospitals during the intervention period vs baseline (odds ratio, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.56-0.91; P = .01). DID odds ratios were 0.72 (95% CI, 0.53-0.98) for the surgical subgroup, 0.74 (95% CI, 0.48-1.14) for the medical subgroup, and 0.72 (95% CI, 0.50-1.03) for the high-risk admission subgroup at CAP hospitals after intervention. All-cause risk-adjusted mortality rate did not change after intervention., Conclusions and Relevance: Implementation of this CAP bundle led to significant IHCA reduction across multiple pediatric CICUs. Future studies may determine if this bundle can be effective in other critically ill populations.
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- 2022
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13. Acute Neurologic Injury in Children Admitted to the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit.
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Bell JL, Saenz L, Domnina Y, Baust T, Panigrahy A, Bell MJ, Camprubí-Camprubí M, and Sanchez-de-Toledo J
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- Acute Disease, Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Male, Retrospective Studies, Heart Defects, Congenital complications, Heart Diseases complications, Nervous System Diseases etiology, Nervous System Diseases mortality
- Abstract
Background: Children with acquired and congenital heart disease both have low mortality but an increased risk of neurologic morbidity that is multifactorial. Our hypothesis was that acute neurologic injuries contribute to mortality in such children and are an important cause of death., Methods: All admissions to the pediatric cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) from January 2011 through January 2015 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were assessed for any acute neurologic events (ANEs) during admission, as defined by radiologic findings or seizures documented on an electroencephalogram., Results: Of the 1,573 children admitted to the CICU, the incidence of ANEs was 8.6%. Mortality of the ANE group was 16.3% compared with 1.5% for those who did not have an ANE. The odds ratio for death with ANEs was 8.55 (95% confidence interval, 4.56 to 16.03). Patients with ANEs had a longer hospital length of stay than those without ANEs (41.4 ± 4 vs 14.2 ± 0.6 days; p < 0.001). Need for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, previous cardiac arrest, and prematurity were independently associated with the presence of an ANE., Conclusions: Neurologic injuries are common in pediatric CICUs and are associated with an increase in mortality and hospital length of stay. Children admitted to the CICU are likely to benefit from improved surveillance and neuroprotective strategies to prevent neurologic death., (Copyright © 2019 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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14. The Epidemiology of Healthcare-associated Infections in Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Units.
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Alten JA, Rahman AKMF, Zaccagni HJ, Shin A, Cooper DS, Blinder JJ, Retzloff L, Aban IB, Graham EM, Zampi J, Domnina Y, and Gaies MG
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- Adolescent, Catheter-Related Infections epidemiology, Catheterization, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross Infection mortality, Female, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Length of Stay, Male, North America epidemiology, Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Surgical Procedures, Operative, Surgical Wound Infection epidemiology, Urinary Tract Infections epidemiology, Young Adult, Cross Infection epidemiology, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) represent serious complications for patients within pediatric cardiac intensive care units (CICU). HAIs are associated with increased morbidity, mortality and resource utilization. There are few studies describing the epidemiology of HAIs across the entire spectrum of patients (surgical and nonsurgical) receiving care in dedicated pediatric CICUs., Methods: Retrospective analyses of 22,839 CICU encounters from October 2013 to September 2016 across 22 North American CICUs contributing data to the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium clinical registry., Results: HAIs occurred in 2.4% of CICU encounters at a rate of 3.3 HAIs/1000 CICU days, with 73% of HAIs occurring in children <1 year. Eighty encounters (14%) had ≥2 HAIs. Aggregate rates for the 4 primary HAIs are as follows: central line-associated blood stream infection, 1.1/1000 line days; catheter-associated urinary tract infections, 1.5/1000 catheter days; ventilator-associated pneumonia, 1.9/1000 ventilator days; surgical site infections, 0.81/100 operations. Surgical and nonsurgical patients had similar HAIs rates/1000 CICU days. Incidence was twice as high in surgical encounters and increased with surgical complexity; postoperative infection occurred in 2.8% of encounters. Prematurity, younger age, presence of congenital anomaly, Society of Thoracic Surgeons-European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery Congenital Heart Surgery Mortality Categories (STAT) 4-5 surgery, admission with an active medical condition, open sternum and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation were independently associated with HAIs. In univariable analysis, HAI was associated with longer hospital length of stay and durations of urinary catheter, central venous catheter and ventilation. Mortality was 24.4% in patients with HAIs versus 3.4% in those without, P < 0.0001., Conclusions: We provide comprehensive multicenter benchmark data regarding rates of HAIs within dedicated pediatric CICUs. We confirm that although rare, HAIs of all types are associated with significant resource utilization and mortality.
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- 2018
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15. Clinical epidemiology and centre variation in chylothorax rates after cardiac surgery in children: a report from the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium.
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Buckley JR, Graham EM, Gaies M, Alten JA, Cooper DS, Costello JM, Domnina Y, Klugman D, Pasquali SK, Donohue JE, Zhang W, and Scheurer MA
- Abstract
Introduction Chylothorax after paediatric cardiac surgery incurs significant morbidity; however, a detailed understanding that does not rely on single-centre or administrative data is lacking. We described the present clinical epidemiology of postoperative chylothorax and evaluated variation in rates among centres with a multicentre cohort of patients treated in cardiac ICU., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study using prospectively collected clinical data from the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium registry. All postoperative paediatric cardiac surgical patients admitted from October, 2013 to September, 2015 were included. Risk factors for chylothorax and association with outcomes were evaluated using multivariable logistic or linear regression models, as appropriate, accounting for within-centre clustering using generalised estimating equations., Results: A total of 4864 surgical hospitalisations from 15 centres were included. Chylothorax occurred in 3.8% (n=185) of hospitalisations. Case-mix-adjusted chylothorax rates varied from 1.5 to 7.6% and were not associated with centre volume. Independent risk factors for chylothorax included age <1 year, non-Caucasian race, single-ventricle physiology, extracardiac anomalies, longer cardiopulmonary bypass time, and thrombosis associated with an upper-extremity central venous line (all p<0.05). Chylothorax was associated with significantly longer duration of postoperative mechanical ventilation, cardiac ICU and hospital length of stay, and higher in-hospital mortality (all p<0.001)., Conclusions: Chylothorax after cardiac surgery in children is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. A five-fold variation in chylothorax rates was observed across centres. Future investigations should identify centres most adept at preventing and managing chylothorax and disseminate best practices.
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- 2017
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16. Coronary arterial Aspergillosis.
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Baird CW, Banks P, and Domnina Y
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- Coronary Artery Disease microbiology, Diagnosis, Differential, Echocardiography, Fatal Outcome, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Aspergillosis diagnosis, Coronary Artery Disease diagnosis, Coronary Vessels microbiology
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- 2010
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