OBJECTIVES:
We sought to update our 2015 work in the Second Pediatric Acute Lung Injury Consensus Conference (PALICC-2) guidelines for the diagnosis and management of pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS), considering new evidence and topic areas that were not previously addressed.
DESIGN:
International consensus conference series involving 52 multidisciplinary international content experts in PARDS and four methodology experts from 15 countries, using consensus conference methodology, and implementation science.
SETTING:
Not applicable.
PATIENTS:
Patients with or at risk for PARDS.
INTERVENTIONS:
None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:
Eleven subgroups conducted systematic or scoping reviews addressing 11 topic areas: 1) definition, incidence, and epidemiology; 2) pathobiology, severity, and risk stratification; 3) ventilatory support; 4) pulmonary-specific ancillary treatment; 5) nonpulmonary treatment; 6) monitoring; 7) noninvasive respiratory support; 8) extracorporeal support; 9) morbidity and long-term outcomes; 10) clinical informatics and data science; and 11) resource-limited settings. The search included MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL Complete (EBSCOhost) and was updated in March 2022. Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation methodology was used to summarize evidence and develop the recommendations, which were discussed and voted on by all PALICC-2 experts. There were 146 recommendations and statements, including: 34 recommendations for clinical practice; 112 consensus-based statements with 18 on PARDS definition, 55 on good practice, seven on policy, and 32 on research. All recommendations and statements had agreement greater than 80%.
CONCLUSIONS:
PALICC-2 recommendations and consensus-based statements should facilitate the implementation and adherence to the best clinical practice in patients with PARDS. These results will also inform the development of future programs of research that are crucially needed to provide stronger evidence to guide the pediatric critical care teams managing these patients.
Objective
The prevalence of septic acute kidney injury (AKI) and impact on functional status of pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) survivors are unknown. We utilized data from an international prospective severe sepsis study to elucidate functional outcomes of children suffering septic AKI.
Design
Secondary analysis of patients in the Sepsis PRevalence, OUtcomes, and Therapies (SPROUT) point prevalence study. AKI was defined on the study day using Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes definitions. Patients with no AKI or stage 1 AKI (“No/mild AKI”) were compared to those with stage 2 or 3 AKI (“Severe AKI”). The primary outcome was a composite of death or new moderate disability at discharge defined as a Pediatric Overall Performance Category score of 3 or higher, and increased by 1 from baseline.
Setting
128 PICUs in 26 countries.
Patients
Children with severe sepsis in the SPROUT study.
Interventions
None
Measurements and Main Results
One hundred two (21%) of 493 patients had Severe AKI. More than twice as many patients with Severe AKI died or developed new moderate disability compared to those with No/mild AKI (64% vs. 30%, p<0.001). Severe AKI was independently associated with death or new moderate disability (adjusted OR 2.5, 95% CI 1.5, 4.2; p=0.001) after adjustment for age, region, baseline disability, malignancy, invasive mechanical ventilation, albumin administration, and the pediatric logistic organ dysfunction score.
Conclusions
In a multi-national cohort of critically ill children with severe sepsis and high mortality rates, septic AKI is independently associated with further increased death or new disability.
Influenza-MRSA coinfection is associated with high fatality in critically ill children. These data support early addition of a second anti-MRSA antibiotic to vancomycin in suspected severe cases.
Arterial diastolic blood pressure (DBP) greater than 25 mm Hg in infants and greater than 30 mm Hg in children greater than 1 year old during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was associated with survival to hospital discharge in one prospective study. We sought to validate these potential hemodynamic targets in a larger multicenter cohort.
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