The presence of a hernia sac in isolated congenital diaphragmatic hernia is associated with less disease severity: A retrospective cohort study

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Matthew Levesque, Gabrielle Derraugh, Daryl Schantz, Melanie I. Morris, Anna Shawyer, Suyin A. Lum Min, Richard Keijzer Published:

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Matthew Levesque, Gabrielle Derraugh, Daryl Schantz, Melanie I. Morris, Anna Shawyer, Suyin A. Lum Min, Richard Keijzer

Topic overview

Abstract

Introduction

We aimed to determine if the presence of a hernia sac in neonates with isolated congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) was associated with better clinical outcomes.

Methods

We performed a retrospective cohort study of infants with isolated CDH from 1991 to 2015. Primary outcome measures were oxygen-dependence and mortality at 28 days. Secondary measures were: inhaled nitric oxide use, vasoactive medication use, ventilator support, and recurrence rates.

Results

Seventy-one patients met the inclusion criteria: 14 patients (19.7%) had a hernia sac, and 57 patients (80.3%) did not. Mortality did not differ between the 2 groups [0 of 14 versus 3 of 57 (5.3%) (p = 1.000)]. Hernia sac patients had similar oxygen-dependence after 28 days [1 of 14 (7.1%) versus 14 of 57 (24.6%) (p = 0.273)]. Hernia sac children required less iNO (0.64 ± 2.41 vs. 6.35 ± 12.2 days, p = 0.002), vasoactive medications (2.79 ± 3.07 vs. 5.36 ± 5.52, p = 0.027), and time on ventilation (7.62 ± 6.12 vs. 15.9 ± 19.2, p = 0.010). Hernia sac children had similar recurrence rates within 2 years [0 of 14 versus 7 of 57 (12.3%) (p = 0.331)].

Conclusion

The presence of a hernia sac was not associated with lower rates of oxygen dependency or death at 28 days but was associated with decreased inhaled nitric oxide, vasoactive medication, and ventilator use.

Level of evidence

III

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