• Critical care medicine · Sep 2018

    Observational Study

    Benzodiazepines and Development of Delirium in Critically Ill Children: Estimating the Causal Effect.

    • Kalgi Mody, Savneet Kaur, Elizabeth A Mauer, Linda M Gerber, Bruce M Greenwald, Gabrielle Silver, and Chani Traube.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2018 Sep 1; 46 (9): 1486-1491.

    ObjectivesBenzodiazepine use may be associated with delirium in critically ill children. However, benzodiazepines remain the first-line sedative choice in PICUs. Objectives were to determine the temporal relationship between administration of benzodiazepines and delirium development, control for time-varying covariates such as mechanical ventilation and opiates, and evaluate the association between dosage of benzodiazepines and subsequent delirium.DesignRetrospective observational study.SettingAcademic tertiary care PICU.PatientsAll consecutive admissions from January 2015 to June 2015.InterventionsRetrospective assessment of benzodiazepine exposure in a population that had been prospectively screened for delirium.Measurements And Main ResultsAll subjects were prospectively screened for delirium throughout their stay, using the Cornell Assessment for Pediatric Delirium, with daily cognitive status assigned as follows: delirium, coma, or normal. Multivariable mixed effects modeling determined predictors of delirium overall, followed by subgroup analysis to assess effect of benzodiazepines on subsequent development of delirium. Marginal structural modeling was used to create a pseudorandomized sample and control for time-dependent variables, obtaining an unbiased estimate of the relationship between benzodiazepines and next day delirium. The cumulative daily dosage of benzodiazepines was calculated to test for a dose-response relationship. Benzodiazepines were strongly associated with transition from normal cognitive status to delirium, more than quadrupling delirium rates (odds ratio, 4.4; CI, 1.7-11.1; p < 0.002). Marginal structural modeling demonstrated odds ratio 3.3 (CI, 1.4-7.8), after controlling for time-dependent confounding of cognitive status, mechanical ventilation, and opiates. With every one log increase in benzodiazepine dosage administered, there was a 43% increase in risk for delirium development.ConclusionsBenzodiazepines are an independent and modifiable risk factor for development of delirium in critically ill children, even after carefully controlling for time-dependent covariates, with a dose-response effect. This temporal relationship suggests causality between benzodiazepine exposure and pediatric delirium and supports limiting the use of benzodiazepines in critically ill children.

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