Resuscitation Plus (Jun 2024)

An 18-year, single centre, retrospective study of long-term neurological outcomes in paediatric submersion-related cardiac arrests

  • Denne Scharink,
  • Maayke Hunfeld,
  • Marijn Albrecht,
  • Karolijn Dulfer,
  • Matthijs de Hoog,
  • Annabel van Gils,
  • Rogier de Jonge,
  • Corinne Buysse

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
p. 100632

Abstract

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Aim: Investigate long-term outcome in paediatric submersion-related cardiac arrests (CA). Methods: Children (age one day-17 years) were included if admitted to the Erasmus MC Sophia Children’s Hospital, after drowning with CA, between 2002 and 2019. Primary outcome was survival with favourable neurological outcome, defined as a Paediatric Cerebral Performance Category (PCPC) score of 1–3 at longest available follow-up. Secondary outcome were age-appropriate neuropsychological assessments at longest available follow-up. Results: Upon hospital admission, 99 children were included (median age at time of CA 3.2 years [IQR 2.0–5.9] and 65% males). Forty children died in-hospital (no return of circulation (45%) or withdrawal of life sustaining therapies (55%)) and 4 children deceased after hospital discharge due to complications following the drowning-incident. Among survivors, with a median follow-up of 2.3 years [IQR 0.2–5.5], 47 children had favourable neurological outcome (i.e. PCPC 1–3) and 8 children unfavourable (unfavourable outcome group total n = 52, i.e. PCPC 4–5 or deceased). Twenty-six (47%) children participated in a neuropsychological assessment (median follow-up 4.0 years [IQR 2.3–8.7]). Compared with normative test data, participants obtained worse general (p = 0.008) and performance (p = 0.003) intelligence scores, processing speed (p = 0.002) and visual motor integration scores (p = 0.0012). Conclusions: Although overall outcome in survivors was favourable at longest available follow-up, significant deficits in neuropsychological assessments were found. This study underlines the need for a standardized long term follow-up program as standard of care in paediatric drowning with CA.

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