Kirschen MP, Francoeur C, Murphy M, Traynor D, Zhang B,
Mensinger JL, Ichord R, Topjian A, Berg RA, Nishisaki A, Morrison W. Epidemiology
of Brain Death in Pediatric Intensive Care Units in the United States. JAMA
Pediatr. 2019 Mar 18. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.0249. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
IMPORTANCE:
Guidelines for declaration of brain death in children were
revised in 2011 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine, American Academy of
Pediatrics, and Child Neurology Society. Despite widespread medical, legal, and
ethical acceptance, ongoing controversies exist with regard to the concept of
brain death and the procedures for its determination.
OBJECTIVES:
To determine the epidemiology and clinical characteristics
of pediatric patients declared brain dead in the United States.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS:
This study involved the abstraction of all patient deaths
from the Virtual Pediatric Systems national multicenter database between
January 1, 2012, and June 30, 2017. All patients who died in pediatric
intensive care units (PICUs) were included.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES:
Patient demographics, preillness developmental status,
severity of illness, cause of death, PICU medical and physical length of stay,
and organ donation status, as well as comparison between patients who were
declared brain dead vs those who sustained cardiovascular or cardiopulmonary
death.
RESULTS:
Of the 15 344 patients who died, 3170 (20.7%) were declared
brain dead; 1861 of these patients (58.7%) were male, and 1401 (44.2%) were
between 2 and 12 years of age. There was a linear association between PICU size
and number of patients declared brain dead per year, with an increase of 4.27
patients (95% CI, 3.46-5.08) per 1000-patient increase in discharges
(P < .001). The median (interquartile range) of patients declared brain dead
per year ranged from 1 (0-3) in smaller PICUs (defined as those with <500
discharges per year) to 10 (7-15) for larger PICUs (those with 2000-4000
discharges per year). The most common causative mechanisms of brain death were
hypoxic-ischemic injury owing to cardiac arrest (1672 of 3170 [52.7%]), shock
and/or respiratory arrest without cardiac arrest (399 of 3170 [12.6%]), and
traumatic brain injury (634 of 3170 [20.0%]). Most patients declared brain dead
(681 of 807 [84.4%]) did not have preexisting neurological dysfunction.
Patients who were organ donors (1568 of 3144 [49.9%]) remained in the PICU
longer after declaration of brain death compared with those who were not donors
(median [interquartile range], 29 [6-41] hours vs 4 [1-8] hours; P < .001).
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE:
Brain death occurred in one-fifth of PICU deaths. Most
children declared brain dead had no preexisting neurological dysfunction and
had an acute hypoxic-ischemic or traumatic brain injury. Brain death
determinations are infrequent, even in large PICUs, emphasizing the importance
of ongoing education for medical professionals and standardization of protocols
to ensure diagnostic accuracy and consistency.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/journal-summaries/epidemiology-pediatric-brain-death-pediatric-intensive/2019/04/15/7563852?spec=neurology
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