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Pediatr Crit Care Me · May 2019
Multicenter StudyExtubation Failure Rates After Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Vary Across Hospitals.
- Sydney R Rooney, Janet E Donohue, Lauren B Bush, Wenying Zhang, Mousumi Banerjee, Sara K Pasquali, and Michael G Gaies.
- Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN.
- Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2019 May 1; 20 (5): 450456450-456.
ObjectivesMany hospitals aim to extubate children early after cardiac surgery, yet it remains unclear how this practice associates with extubation failure. We evaluated adjusted extubation failure rates and duration of postoperative mechanical ventilation across hospitals and assessed cardiac ICU organizational factors associated with extubation failure.DesignSecondary analysis of the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium clinical registry.SettingPediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium cardiac ICUs.PatientsPatients with qualifying index surgical procedures from August 2014 to June 2017.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsWe modeled hospital-level adjusted extubation failure rates using multivariable logistic regression. A previously validated Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium model was used to calculate adjusted postoperative mechanical ventilation. Observed-to-expected ratios for both metrics were derived for each hospital to assess performance. Hierarchical logistic regression was used to assess the association between cardiac ICU factors and extubation failure. Overall, 16,052 surgical hospitalizations were analyzed. Predictors of extubation failure (p < 0.05 in final case-mix adjustment model) included younger age, underweight, greater surgical complexity, airway anomaly, chromosomal anomaly/syndrome, longer cardiopulmonary bypass time, and other preoperative comorbidities. Three hospitals were better-than-expected outliers for extubation failure (95% CI around observed-to-expected < 1), and three hospitals were worse-than-expected (95% CI around observed-to-expected > 1). Two hospitals were better-than-expected outliers for both extubation failure and postoperative mechanical ventilation, and three were worse-than-expected for both. No hospital was an outlier in opposite directions. Greater nursing hours per patient day and percent nursing staff with critical care certification were associated with lower odds of extubation failure. Cardiac ICU factors such as fewer inexperienced nurses, greater percent critical care trained attendings, cardiac ICU-dedicated respiratory therapists, and fewer patients per cardiac ICU attending were not associated with lower odds of extubation failure.ConclusionsWe saw no evidence that hospitals trade higher extubation failure rates for shorter duration of postoperative mechanical ventilation after pediatric cardiac surgery. Increasing specialized cardiac ICU nursing hours per patient day may achieve better extubation outcomes and mitigate the impact of inexperienced nurses.
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