Improving gastroschisis outcomes: does birth place matter?

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2014

Identifier

DOI: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2014.09.019

Abstract

Purpose: Babies born in the hospital where they obtain definitive surgical care do not require transportation between institutions and may have shorter time to surgical intervention. Whether these differences result in meaningful improvement in outcomes has been debated. A multi-institutional retrospective study was performed comparing outcomes based on birthplace.

Methods: Six institutions within the PedSRC reviewed infants born with gastroschisis from 2008 to 2013. Birthplace, perinatal, and postoperative data were collected. Based on the P-NSQIP definition, inborn was defined as birth at the pediatric hospital where repair occurred. The primary outcome was days to full enteral nutrition (FEN; 120kcal/kg/day).

Results: 528 patients with gastroschisis were identified: 286 inborn, 242 outborn. Days to FEN, time to bowel coverage and abdominal wall closure, primary closure rate, and length of stay significantly favored inborn patients. In multivariable analysis, birthplace was not a significant predictor of time to FEN. Gestational age, presence of atresia or necrosis, primary closure rate, and time to abdominal wall closure were significant predictors.

Conclusions: Inborn patients had bowel coverage and definitive closure sooner with fewer days to full feeds and shorter length of stay. Birthplace appears to be important and should be considered in efforts to improve outcomes in patients with gastroschisis.

Journal Title

Journal of pediatric surgery

Volume

49

Issue

12

First Page

1771

Last Page

1775

MeSH Keywords

Female; Gastroplasty; Gastroschisis; Gestational Age; Humans; Incidence; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Prognosis; Residence Characteristics; Retrospective Studies; Treatment Outcome

Keywords

Birth location; Birthplace; Gastroschisis; Outcomes; Regionalization

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