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Airway management in the paediatric difficult intubation registry: a propensity score matched analysis of outcomes over timeResearch in context

Authors :
Mary Lyn Stein
Lina Andrea Sarmiento Argüello
Steven J. Staffa
Julia Heunis
Chinyere Egbuta
Stephen G. Flynn
Sabina A. Khan
Stefano Sabato
Brad M. Taicher
Franklin Chiao
Adrian Bosenberg
Angela C. Lee
H. Daniel Adams
Britta S. von Ungern-Sternberg
Raymond S. Park
James M. Peyton
Patrick N. Olomu
Agnes I. Hunyady
Annery Garcia-Marcinkiewicz
John E. Fiadjoe
Pete G. Kovatsis
Benjamin Bruins
Paul Stricker
Elizabeth Laverriere
Justin L. Lockman
Brian Struyk
Christopher Ward
Akira Nishisaki
Ramesh Kodavatiganti
Rodrigo Daly Guris
Luis Sequera-Ramos
Mark Teen
Ayodele Oke
Grace Hsu
Arul Lingappan
Rhae Battles
Ashley Bocanegra
Tally Goldfarb
Edgar Kiss
Peter Szmuk
Sam Mireles
Andrea Murray
Simon Whyte
Ranu Jain
Maria Matuszczak
Christopher Holmes
Alexander McCann
Clyde Matava
Nicholas Dalesio
Robert Greenberg
Angela Lucero
Sapna Desai
Sondra Rosander
Sindhu Samba
Charles Schrock
Sydney Nykiel-Bailey
Jennifer Marsh
Melissa Brooks Peterson
Amy Lee
Somaletha Bhattacharya
Nicholas Burjek
Narasimhan Jagannathan
David Lardner
Christy Crockett
Sara Robetson
Jasmine Patel
Aarti Sharma
Thomas Templeton
Piedad Echeverry Marín
Carolina Pérez-Pradilla
Neeta Singh
David Sommerfield
Neil Hauser
Emily Hesselink
Hilana Lewkowitz-Shpuntoff
Pilar Castro
N. Ricardo Riveros Perez
Eduardo Vega
Alejandro González
Paola Ostermann
Kasia Rubin
Jonathan Meserve
Charles Lord
Angela Lee
Songyos Valairucha
Priti Dalal
Thanh Tran
Taylor Anspach
Lisa K. Lee
Ihab Ayad
Mohamed Rehman
Allison Fernandez
Lillian Zamora
Niroop Ravula
Sadiq Shaik
Judit Szolnoki
Preethy Mathew
Sandhya Yaddanapudi
Indu Sen
Aakriti Gupta
Kathryn Handlogten
J. Michael Sroka
Vinícius Caldeira Quintão
Ricardo Vieira Carlos
Fernanda Leite
Source :
EClinicalMedicine, Vol 69, Iss , Pp 102461- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Summary: Background: The Paediatric Difficult Intubation Collaborative identified multiple attempts and persistence with direct laryngoscopy as risk factors for complications in children with difficult tracheal intubations and subsequently engaged in initiatives to reduce repeated attempts and persistence with direct laryngoscopy in children. We hypothesised these efforts would lead to fewer attempts, fewer direct laryngoscopy attempts and decrease complications. Methods: Paediatric patients less than 18 years of age with difficult direct laryngoscopy were enrolled in the Paediatric Difficult Intubation Registry. We define patients with difficult direct laryngoscopy as those in whom (1) an attending or consultant obtained a Cormack Lehane Grade 3 or 4 view on direct laryngoscopy, (2) limited mouth opening makes direct laryngoscopy impossible, (3) direct laryngoscopy failed in the preceding 6 months, and (4) direct laryngoscopy was deferred due to perceived risk of harm or poor chance of success. We used a 5:1 propensity score match to compare an early cohort from the initial Paediatric Difficult Intubation Registry analysis (August 6, 2012–January 31, 2015, 785 patients, 13 centres) and a current cohort from the Registry (March 4, 2017–March 31, 2023, 3925 patients, 43 centres). The primary outcome was first attempt success rate between cohorts. Success was defined as confirmed endotracheal intubation and assessed by the treating clinician. Secondary outcomes were eventual success rate, number of attempts at intubation, number of attempts with direct laryngoscopy, the incidence of persistence with direct laryngoscopy, use of supplemental oxygen, all complications, and severe complications. Findings: First-attempt success rate was higher in the current cohort (42% vs 32%, OR 1.5 95% CI 1.3–1.8, p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25895370
Volume :
69
Issue :
102461-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
EClinicalMedicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4e2e386d5ac64ad8a915fb610fc3543c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102461