4.6 Article

Esophageal perforation in very low birth weight infants

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 180, Issue 2, Pages 513-518

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00431-020-03894-z

Keywords

Traumatic esophageal perforation; Epidemiology; G tube; Pneumothorax; Preterm infants

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This study aimed to assess the prevalence and outcomes of esophageal perforation in very low birth weight infants. The results showed that esophageal perforation does not independently increase the risk for mortality, and there is a significant trend for increasing prevalence over the years. The study provides valuable insights into the prevalence and management of esophageal perforation in preterm infants.
We aimed to assess the prevalence and outcomes of esophageal perforation in very low birth weight infants. This retrospective cohort study utilized the US National Inpatient Sample dataset for the years 2000 to 2017. A total of 1,755,418 very low birth weight infants were included; of them, 861 (0.05%) were diagnosed with esophageal perforation. The majority (77.9%) of infants were in the birth weight category < 1000 g and 77.7% in infants <= 28 weeks of gestation. The majority (73%) of infants were tracheally intubated and received mechanical ventilation; of them, 24 infants (2.8%) had tracheostomy. Mortality associated with esophageal perforation was 25.8%. Regression analysis did not show an association between esophageal perforation and increased mortality in preterm infants (aOR = 1.0, CI: 0.83-1.20, p = 0.991). Procedures encountered in these infants include thoracentesis (10.8%), laparotomy (4.1%), percutaneous abdominal drainage (4.1%), and gastrostomy tube insertion (6.2%), whereas the rest of the infants were managed conservatively. There was a significant trend for increasing prevalence of esophageal perforation over the years. Conclusion: Esophageal perforation does not independently increase the risk for mortality in very low birth weight infants. The increasing prevalence is possibly related to increased care offered to infants at limits of viability in recent years. What is Known: Knowledge about esophageal perforation is derived from anecdotal single-center case reports. Esophageal perforation in neonates is mostly iatrogenic. It is considered a critical complication that is associated with high mortality. What is New: This is the first and largest national study on prevalence of esophageal perforation in preterm infants. Esophageal perforation does not independently increase the risk for mortality. Septicemia and pneumothorax are frequent complications to esophageal perforation

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