Artículo de revista
Association of guideline publication and delays to treatment in pediatric status epilepticus
Fecha
2020Registro en:
Neurology® 2020;95:e1222-e1235
10.1212/WNL.0000000000010174
Autor
Sánchez Fernández, Iván
Abend, Nicholas S.
Amengual Gual, Marta
Anderson, Anne
Arya, Ravindra
Barcia Aguilar, Cristina
Brenton, James Nicholas
Carpenter, Jessica L.
Chapman, Kevin E.
Clark, Justice
Farías Moeller, Raquel
Gaillard, William D.
Gainza Lein, Marina
Glauser, Tracy
Goldstein, Joshua
Goodkin, Howard P.
Guerriero, Rejean M.
Lai, Yi-Chen
McDonough, Tiffani
Mikati, Mohamad A.
Morgan, Lindsey A.
Novotny, Edward
Payne, Eric
Peariso, Katrina
Piantino, Juan
Ostendorf, Adam
Sands, Tristán T.
Sannagowdara, Kumar
Tasker, Robert C.
Tchapyjnikov, Dimtry
Topjian, Alexis A.
Vásquez, Alejandra
Wainwright, Mark S.
Wilfong, Angus
Williams, Kowryn
Loddenkemper, Tobías
Institución
Resumen
Objective To determine whether publication of evidence on delays in time to treatment shortens time to treatment in pediatric refractory convulsive status epilepticus (rSE), we compared time to treatment before (2011-2014) and after (2015-2019) publication of evidence of delays in treatment of rSE in the Pediatric Status Epilepticus Research Group (pSERG) as assessed by patient interviews and record review. Methods We performed a retrospective analysis of a prospectively collected dataset from June 2011 to September 2019 on pediatric patients (1 month-21 years of age) with rSE. Results We studied 328 patients (56% male) with median (25th-75th percentile [p(25)-p(75)]) age of 3.8 (1.3-9.4) years. There were no differences in the median (p(25)-p(75)) time to first benzodiazepine (BZD) (20 [5-52.5] vs 15 [5-38] minutes,p= 0.3919), time to first non-BZD antiseizure medication (68 [34.5-163.5] vs 65 [33-142] minutes,p= 0.7328), and time to first continuous infusion (186 [124.2-571] vs 160 [89.5-495] minutes,p= 0.2236). Among 157 patients with out-of-hospital onset whose time to hospital arrival was available, the proportion who received at least 1 BZD before hospital arrival increased after publication of evidence of delays (41 of 81 [50.6%] vs 57 of 76 [75%],p= 0.0018), and the odds ratio (OR) was also increased in multivariable logistic regression (OR 4.35 [95% confidence interval 1.96-10.3],p= 0.0005). Conclusion Publication of evidence on delays in time to treatment was not associated with improvements in time to treatment of rSE, although it was associated with an increase in the proportion of patients who received at least 1 BZD before hospital arrival.