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Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement

BACKGROUND: Improvements in hospital‐based care have reduced early mortality in congenital heart disease. Later adverse outcomes may be reducible by focusing on care at or after discharge. We aimed to identify risk factors for such events within 1 year of discharge after intervention in infancy and,...

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Autores principales: Crowe, Sonya, Ridout, Deborah A., Knowles, Rachel, Tregay, Jenifer, Wray, Jo, Barron, David J., Cunningham, David, Parslow, Roger C., Utley, Martin, Franklin, Rodney, Bull, Catherine, Brown, Katherine L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4889202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27207967
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.116.003369
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author Crowe, Sonya
Ridout, Deborah A.
Knowles, Rachel
Tregay, Jenifer
Wray, Jo
Barron, David J.
Cunningham, David
Parslow, Roger C.
Utley, Martin
Franklin, Rodney
Bull, Catherine
Brown, Katherine L.
author_facet Crowe, Sonya
Ridout, Deborah A.
Knowles, Rachel
Tregay, Jenifer
Wray, Jo
Barron, David J.
Cunningham, David
Parslow, Roger C.
Utley, Martin
Franklin, Rodney
Bull, Catherine
Brown, Katherine L.
author_sort Crowe, Sonya
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Improvements in hospital‐based care have reduced early mortality in congenital heart disease. Later adverse outcomes may be reducible by focusing on care at or after discharge. We aimed to identify risk factors for such events within 1 year of discharge after intervention in infancy and, separately, to identify subgroups that might benefit from different forms of intervention. METHODS AND RESULTS: Cardiac procedures performed in infants between 2005 and 2010 in England and Wales from the UK National Congenital Heart Disease Audit were linked to intensive care records. Among 7976 infants, 333 (4.2%) died before discharge. Of 7643 infants discharged alive, 246 (3.2%) died outside the hospital or after an unplanned readmission to intensive care (risk factors were age, weight‐for‐age, cardiac procedure, cardiac diagnosis, congenital anomaly, preprocedural clinical deterioration, prematurity, ethnicity, and duration of initial admission; c‐statistic 0.78 [0.75–0.82]). Of the 7643, 514 (6.7%) died outside the hospital or had an unplanned intensive care readmission (same risk factors but with neurodevelopmental condition and acquired cardiac diagnosis and without preprocedural deterioration; c‐statistic 0.78 [0.75–0.80]). Classification and regression tree analysis were used to identify 6 subgroups stratified by the level (3–24%) and nature of risk for death outside the hospital or unplanned intensive care readmission based on neurodevelopmental condition, cardiac diagnosis, congenital anomaly, and duration of initial admission. An additional 115 patients died after planned intensive care admission (typically following elective surgery). CONCLUSIONS: Adverse outcomes in the year after discharge are of similar magnitude to in‐hospital mortality, warrant service improvements, and are not confined to diagnostic groups currently targeted with enhanced monitoring.
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spelling pubmed-48892022016-06-09 Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement Crowe, Sonya Ridout, Deborah A. Knowles, Rachel Tregay, Jenifer Wray, Jo Barron, David J. Cunningham, David Parslow, Roger C. Utley, Martin Franklin, Rodney Bull, Catherine Brown, Katherine L. J Am Heart Assoc Original Research BACKGROUND: Improvements in hospital‐based care have reduced early mortality in congenital heart disease. Later adverse outcomes may be reducible by focusing on care at or after discharge. We aimed to identify risk factors for such events within 1 year of discharge after intervention in infancy and, separately, to identify subgroups that might benefit from different forms of intervention. METHODS AND RESULTS: Cardiac procedures performed in infants between 2005 and 2010 in England and Wales from the UK National Congenital Heart Disease Audit were linked to intensive care records. Among 7976 infants, 333 (4.2%) died before discharge. Of 7643 infants discharged alive, 246 (3.2%) died outside the hospital or after an unplanned readmission to intensive care (risk factors were age, weight‐for‐age, cardiac procedure, cardiac diagnosis, congenital anomaly, preprocedural clinical deterioration, prematurity, ethnicity, and duration of initial admission; c‐statistic 0.78 [0.75–0.82]). Of the 7643, 514 (6.7%) died outside the hospital or had an unplanned intensive care readmission (same risk factors but with neurodevelopmental condition and acquired cardiac diagnosis and without preprocedural deterioration; c‐statistic 0.78 [0.75–0.80]). Classification and regression tree analysis were used to identify 6 subgroups stratified by the level (3–24%) and nature of risk for death outside the hospital or unplanned intensive care readmission based on neurodevelopmental condition, cardiac diagnosis, congenital anomaly, and duration of initial admission. An additional 115 patients died after planned intensive care admission (typically following elective surgery). CONCLUSIONS: Adverse outcomes in the year after discharge are of similar magnitude to in‐hospital mortality, warrant service improvements, and are not confined to diagnostic groups currently targeted with enhanced monitoring. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4889202/ /pubmed/27207967 http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.116.003369 Text en © 2016 The Authors. Published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wiley Blackwell. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Research
Crowe, Sonya
Ridout, Deborah A.
Knowles, Rachel
Tregay, Jenifer
Wray, Jo
Barron, David J.
Cunningham, David
Parslow, Roger C.
Utley, Martin
Franklin, Rodney
Bull, Catherine
Brown, Katherine L.
Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement
title Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement
title_full Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement
title_fullStr Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement
title_full_unstemmed Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement
title_short Death and Emergency Readmission of Infants Discharged After Interventions for Congenital Heart Disease: A National Study of 7643 Infants to Inform Service Improvement
title_sort death and emergency readmission of infants discharged after interventions for congenital heart disease: a national study of 7643 infants to inform service improvement
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4889202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27207967
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.116.003369
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