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Early Use of Adjunctive Therapies for Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: A PARDIE Study. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2020 Jun 01;201(11):1389-1397

Date

03/05/2020

Pubmed ID

32130867

Pubmed Central ID

PMC7258654

DOI

10.1164/rccm.201909-1807OC

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85085905075 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   33 Citations

Abstract

Rationale: Few data exist to guide early adjunctive therapy use in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS).Objectives: To describe contemporary use of adjunctive therapies for early PARDS as a framework for future investigations.Methods: This was a preplanned substudy of a prospective, international, cross-sectional observational study of children with PARDS from 100 centers over 10 study weeks.Measurements and Main Results: We investigated six adjunctive therapies for PARDS: continuous neuromuscular blockade, corticosteroids, inhaled nitric oxide (iNO), prone positioning, high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV), and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Almost half (45%) of children with PARDS received at least one therapy. Variability was noted in the median starting oxygenation index of each therapy; corticosteroids started at the lowest oxygenation index (13.0; interquartile range, 7.6-22.0) and HFOV at the highest (25.7; interquartile range, 16.7-37.3). Continuous neuromuscular blockade was the most common, used in 31%, followed by iNO (13%), corticosteroids (10%), prone positioning (10%), HFOV (9%), and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (3%). Steroids, iNO, and HFOV were associated with comorbidities. Prone positioning and HFOV were more common in middle-income countries and less frequently used in North America. The use of multiple ancillary therapies increased over the first 3 days of PARDS, but there was not an easily identifiable pattern of combination or order of use.Conclusions: The contemporary description of prevalence, combinations of therapies, and oxygenation threshold for which the therapies are applied is important for design of future studies. Region of the world, income, and comorbidities influence adjunctive therapy use and are important variables to include in PARDS investigations.

Author List

Rowan CM, Klein MJ, Hsing DD, Dahmer MK, Spinella PC, Emeriaud G, Hassinger AB, PiƱeres-Olave BE, Flori HR, Haileselassie B, Lopez-Fernandez YM, Chima RS, Shein SL, Maddux AB, Lillie J, Izquierdo L, Kneyber MCJ, Smith LS, Khemani RG, Thomas NJ, Yehya N

Author

Rainer G. Gedeit MD Associate Chief Medical Officer in the Children's Administration department at Children's Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Child
Child, Preschool
Combined Modality Therapy
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Humans
Infant
Male
Prospective Studies
Time Factors