What are the important morbidities associated with paediatric cardiac surgery? A mixed methods study
- PMID: 31501104
- PMCID: PMC6738689
- DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028533
What are the important morbidities associated with paediatric cardiac surgery? A mixed methods study
Abstract
Objectives: Given the current excellent early mortality rates for paediatric cardiac surgery, stakeholders believe that this important safety outcome should be supplemented by a wider range of measures. Our objectives were to prospectively measure the incidence of morbidities following paediatric cardiac surgery and to evaluate their clinical and health-economic impact over 6 months.
Design: The design was a prospective, multicentre, multidisciplinary mixed methods study.
Setting: The setting was 5 of the 10 paediatric cardiac surgery centres in the UK with 21 months recruitment.
Participants: Included were 3090 paediatric cardiac surgeries, of which 666 patients were recruited to an impact substudy.
Results: Families and clinicians prioritised:Acute neurological event, unplanned re-intervention, feeding problems, renal replacement therapy, major adverse events, extracorporeal life support, necrotising enterocolitis, postsurgical infection and prolonged pleural effusion or chylothorax.Among 3090 consecutive surgeries, there were 675 (21.8%) with at least one of these morbidities. Independent risk factors for morbidity included neonatal age, complex heart disease and prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass (p<0.001). Among patients with morbidity, 6-month survival was 88.2% (95% CI 85.4 to 90.6) compared with 99.3% (95% CI 98.9 to 99.6) with none of the morbidities (p<0.001). The impact substudy in 340 children with morbidity and 326 control children with no morbidity indicated that morbidity-related impairment in quality of life improved between 6 weeks and 6 months. When compared with children with no morbidities, those with morbidity experienced a median of 13 (95% CI 10.2 to 15.8, p<0.001) fewer days at home by 6 months, and an adjusted incremental cost of £21 292 (95% CI £17 694 to £32 423, p<0.001).
Conclusions: Evaluation of postoperative morbidity is more complicated than measuring early mortality. However, tracking morbidity after paediatric cardiac surgery over 6 months offers stakeholders important data that are of value to parents and will be useful in driving future quality improvement.
Keywords: cardiac surgery; complications; morbidity; outcome; paediatrics; quality of life.
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: None declared.
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References
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- NICOR NICOR: National Institute for cardiovascular outcomes research: congenital heart diseases website UCL London UK. University College London, 2017.
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