AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the causes and circumstances of death in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), hypothesizing that nonpulmonary factors, rather than hypoxemia, lead to most fatalities.
  • Among 798 cases analyzed, 153 children died, with a median time of 6 days until death; those who died early often suffered from severe illness and neurologic issues, while later deaths were associated with multisystem organ failure.
  • Withdrawal of therapy was the main cause of death across timeframes, with refractory hypoxemia contributing to only 20% of the deaths, highlighting the need for a broader understanding of mortality factors in pediatric ARDS.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Investigations of acute respiratory distress syndrome in adults suggest hypoxemia is an uncommon cause of death. However, the epidemiology of death in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome is not well characterized. We aimed to describe the cause, mode, and timing of death in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome nonsurvivors. We hypothesized that most deaths would be due to nonpulmonary factors, rather than hypoxemia.

Design: Retrospective, decedent-only analysis.

Setting: Two large, academic PICUs.

Patients: Nonsurvivors with pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Interventions: None.

Measurements And Main Results: Of 798 subjects with pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome, there were 153 nonsurvivors (19% mortality). Median time to death was 6 days (interquartile range, 3-13 d) after pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome onset. Patients dying less than 7 days after pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome onset had greater illness severity and worse oxygenation. Patients dying less than 7 days were more likely to die of a neurologic cause, including brain death. Patients dying greater than or equal to 7 days after pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome onset were more commonly immunocompromised. Multisystem organ failure predominated in deaths greater than or equal to 7 days. Withdrawal of therapy was the most common mode of death at all timepoints, accounting for 66% of all deaths. Organ dysfunction was common at time of death, irrespective of cause of death. Refractory hypoxemia accounted for only a minority of pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome deaths (20%).

Conclusions: In pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome, early deaths were due primarily to neurologic failure, whereas later deaths were more commonly due to multisystem organ failure. Deaths from neurologic causes accounted for a substantial portion of nonsurvivors. Refractory hypoxemia accounted for only a minority of deaths. Our study highlights limitations associated with using death as an endpoint in therapeutic pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome trials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6185780PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CCM.0000000000003371DOI Listing

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