BMJ Open (Feb 2024)

Design and rationale of the Post-Intensive Care Syndrome – paediatrics (PICS-p) Longitudinal Cohort Study

  • David Wypij,
  • Gillian Colville,
  • Joseph C Manning,
  • Martha A Q Curley,
  • R Scott Watson,
  • Elizabeth Y Killien,
  • Laura Beth Kalvas,
  • Mallory A Perry-Eaddy,
  • Amy M Cassidy,
  • Erica B Miller,
  • Mritika Talukder,
  • Neethi P Pinto,
  • Janet E Rennick,
  • Lisa A Asaro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-084445
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2

Abstract

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Introduction As paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) mortality declines, there is growing recognition of the morbidity experienced by children surviving critical illness and their families. A comprehensive understanding of the adverse physical, cognitive, emotional and social sequelae common to PICU survivors is limited, however, and the trajectory of recovery and risk factors for morbidity remain unknown.Methods and analysis The Post-Intensive Care Syndrome – paediatrics Longitudinal Cohort Study will evaluate child and family outcomes over 2 years following PICU discharge and identify child and clinical factors associated with impaired outcomes. We will enrol 750 children from 30 US PICUs during their first PICU hospitalisation, including 500 case participants experiencing ≥3 days of intensive care that include critical care therapies (eg, mechanical ventilation, vasoactive infusions) and 250 age-matched, sex-matched and medical complexity-matched control participants experiencing a single night in the PICU with no intensive care therapies. Children, parents and siblings will complete surveys about health-related quality of life, physical function, cognitive status, emotional health and peer and family relationships at multiple time points from baseline recall through 2 years post-PICU discharge. We will compare outcomes and recovery trajectories of case participants to control participants, identify risk factors associated with poor outcomes and determine the emotional and social health consequences of paediatric critical illness on parents and siblings.Ethics and dissemination This study has received ethical approval from the University of Pennsylvania Institutional Review Board (protocol #843844). Our overall objective is to characterise the ongoing impact of paediatric critical illness to guide development of interventions that optimise outcomes among children surviving critical illness and their families. Findings will be presented at key disciplinary meetings and in peer-reviewed publications at fixed data points. Published manuscripts will be added to our public study website to ensure findings are available to families, clinicians and researchers.Trials registration number NCT04967365.