Transcatheter closure of ASD with the FSO is feasible and safe. FSO results compare favorably with ASO results. However, additional long-term studies that include more patients are mandatory.
OBJECTIVES:
To describe and compare survival among patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest as a function of their status for coronavirus disease 2019.
DESIGN:
We performed an observational study of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients between March 2020 and December 2020. Coronavirus disease 2019 status (confirmed, suspected, or negative) was defined according to the World Health Organization’s criteria.
SETTING:
Information on the patients and their care was extracted from the French national out-of-hospital cardiac arrest registry. The French prehospital emergency medical system has two tiers: the fire department intervenes rapidly to provide basic life support, and mobile ICUs provide advanced life support. The study data (including each patient’s coronavirus disease 2019 status) were collected by 95 mobile ICUs throughout France.
PATIENTS:
We included 6,624 out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients: 127 cases with confirmed coronavirus disease 2019, 473 with suspected coronavirus disease 2019, and 6,024 negative for coronavirus disease 2019.
INTERVENTIONS:
None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:
The “confirmed” and “suspected” groups of coronavirus disease 2019 patients had similar characteristics and were more likely to have suffered an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with a respiratory cause (confirmed: 53.7%, suspected coronavirus disease 2019: 56.5%;
p
= 0.472) than noncoronavirus disease 2019 patients (14.0%;
p
< 0.001 vs confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 patients). Advanced life support was initiated for 57.5% of the confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 patients, compared with 64.5% of the suspected coronavirus disease 2019 patients (
p
= 0.149) and 70.6% of the noncoronavirus disease 2019 ones (
p
= 0.002). The survival rate at 30-day postout-of-hospital cardiac arrest was 0% in the confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 group, 0.9% in the suspected coronavirus disease 2019 group (
p
= 0.583 vs confirmed), and 3.5% (
p
= 0.023) in the noncoronavirus disease 2019 group.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our results highlighted a zero survival rate in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients with confirmed coronavirus disease 2019. This finding raises important questions with regard to the futility of resuscitation for coronavirus disease 2019 patients and the management of the associated risks.
Objective:
To determine the prevalence and risk markers of anemia at PICU discharge.
Design:
Bicenter retrospective cohort study.
Setting:
Two multidisciplinary French PICUs.
Patients:
All children admitted during a 5-year period, staying in the PICU for at least 2 days, and for whom a hemoglobin was available at PICU discharge.
Interventions:
None.
Measurements and Main Results:
Patient, admission, and PICU stay characteristics were retrospectively collected in the electronic medical records of each participating PICU. Anemia was defined according to the World Health Organization criteria. Among the 3,170 patients included for analysis, 1,868 (58.9%) were anemic at discharge from PICU. The proportion of anemic children differed between age categories, whereas the median hemoglobin level did not exhibit significant variations according to age. After multivariate adjustment, anemia at PICU admission was the strongest predictor of anemia at PICU discharge, and the strength of this association varied according to age (interaction). Children anemic at PICU admission had a reduced risk of anemia at PICU discharge if transfused with RBCs during the PICU stay, if less than 6 months old, or if creatinine level at PICU admission was low. Children not anemic at PICU admission had an increased risk of anemia at PICU discharge if they were thrombocytopenic at PICU admission, if they had higher C-reactive protein levels, and if they received plasma transfusion, inotropic/vasopressor support, or mechanical ventilation during the PICU stay.
Conclusions:
Anemia is frequent after pediatric critical illness. Anemia status at PICU admission defines different subgroups of critically ill children with specific prevalence and risk markers of anemia at PICU discharge. Further studies are required to confirm our results, to better define anemia during pediatric critical illness, and to highlight the causes of post-PICU stay anemia, its course, and its association with post-PICU outcomes.
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