Long-term posttraumatic stress symptoms vary inversely with early opiate dosing in children recovering from serious burns: effects durable at 4 years.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

From the Shriners Hospitals for Children (R.L.S., F.J.S., M.I.H., R.G.T.); Massachusetts General Hospital (R.L.S., F.J.S., A.L., R.G.T.); and Center for the Assessment of Pharmaceutical Practices (CAPP) (L.E.K.), Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts; Shriners Hospitals for Children (D.N.H., W.J.M., M.N.), Galveston, Texas; Shriners Hospitals for Children (R.J.K., T.K.S.), Cincinnati, Ohio; Shriners Hospitals for Children (Northern California) (T.L.P., G.C.), Sacramento, California.

Published: March 2014

Background: Children surviving serious burns are at risk for developing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a function both of the injury and of its treatment. Short-term studies in such children have demonstrated reduced PTSD symptoms with intensive early pain control. However, the long-term impact of early pain control strategies on posttraumatic stress symptoms in children recovering from serious burn injuries has not been examined.

Methods: This was a retrospective review of a multiple time point data collection involving a cohort of 147 infants, children, and teenagers with 4 years of follow-up after serious burns conducted at 4 pediatric burn centers to examine the impact of early opiate dosing on long-term posttraumatic stress symptoms. The main outcome measure was the nine-item Short Form Child Stress Disorders Checklist, which is an established and validated assessment. The impact of total opiate dosing during the first 7 days on these scores was assessed.

Results: Subjects had an average age of 11 years and average injury size of 22% total body surface area burned (%TBS). The correlation between opiate units (OUs) and %TBS was 0.46 at baseline, OU increasing with increasing %TBS. OUs were strongly predictive of Child Stress Disorders Checklist scores up to 4 years, with higher OU (10 units vs. 6 and 2 units) remaining constantly different up to 4 years in predicting lower stress scores for both smaller and larger burns.

Conclusion: Early opiate management of pain associated with acute burn wounds and burn treatment predicts the development and resolution rate of PTSD symptoms in a large multicenter sample of children hospitalized for serious burns. The effect seems to be dose related and durable at least up to 4 years in a range of burn sizes.

Level Of Evidence: Prognostic/epidemiologic study, level II.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TA.0b013e3182ab111cDOI Listing

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