Moxon CA, Zhao L, Li C, Seydel KB, MacCormick IJ, Diggle PJ,
Mallewa M, Solomon T, Beare NA, Glover SJ, Harding SP, Lewallen S,
Kampondeni S, Potchen MJ, Taylor TE, Postels DG. Safety of lumbar puncture in comatose
children with clinical features of cerebral malaria. Neurology. 2016 Oct
28. pii:10.1212/WNL.0000000000003372. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
We assessed the independent association of lumbar puncture
(LP) and death in Malawian children admitted to the hospital with the clinical
features of cerebral malaria (CM).
METHODS:
This was a retrospective cohort study in Malawian children
with clinical features of CM. Allocation to LP was nonrandom and was associated
with severity of illness. Propensity score-based analyses were used to adjust
for this bias and assess the independent association between LP and mortality.
RESULTS:
Data were available for 1,075 children: 866 (80.6%)
underwent LP and 209 (19.4%) did not. Unadjusted mortality rates were lower in
children who underwent LP (15.3% vs 26.7% in the no-LP group) but differences
in covariates between the 2 groups suggested bias in LP allocation. After
propensity score matching, all covariates were balanced. Propensity score-based
analyses showed no change in mortality rate associated with LP: by inverse
probability weighting, the average risk reduction was 2.0% at 12 hours (95%
confidence interval -1.5% to 5.5%, p = 0.27) and 1.7% during hospital admission
(95% confidence interval -4.5% to 7.9%, p = 0.60). Undergoing LP did not change
the risk of mortality in subanalyses of children with severe brain swelling on MRI
or in those with papilledema.
CONCLUSION:
In comatose children with suspected CM who were clinically
stable, we found no evidence that LP increases mortality, even in children with
objective signs of raised intracranial pressure.
Courtesy of Doximity
Courtesy of Doximity
See: http://law.justia.com/cases/minnesota/supreme-court/1982/51087-2.html
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