Predictors of index admission mortality and morbidity in contemporary esophageal atresia patients

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Stefanie P. Lazow, Offir Ben-Ishay, Vamsi K. Aribindi, Steven J. Staffa, Francesca R. Pluchinotta, Samuel C. Schecter, Ryan P. Cauley, Wayne Tworetzky, Hanmin Lee, Anita J. Moon-Grady, Terry L. Buchmiller Published:

Author / Expert

Stefanie P. Lazow, Offir Ben-Ishay, Vamsi K. Aribindi, Steven J. Staffa, Francesca R. Pluchinotta, Samuel C. Schecter, Ryan P. Cauley, Wayne Tworetzky, Hanmin Lee, Anita J. Moon-Grady, Terry L. Buchmiller

Topic overview

Abstract

Background/Purpose

The Spitz classification for esophageal atresia with/without tracheoesophageal fistula (EA/TEF) predicts mortality. This study evaluates the contemporary relevance of the Spitz classification and investigates predictors of morbidity.

Methods

EA/TEF patients born between 1995 and 2018 at two centers were retrospectively reviewed. Clinical variables including sex, prenatal diagnosis, birth weight, prematurity, major congenital heart disease (MCHD), and pre-operative mechanical ventilation (POMV) were collected. Index admission composite morbidity was considered positive if: length-of-stay >90th percentile (139 days), ventilation days >90th percentile (24 days), and/or gastrostomy was used for long-term feeding. Multivariable regression determined predictors of index admission mortality and composite morbidity. A composite morbidity predictive algorithm was created.

ROC curves evaluated model discrimination.

Results

Of 253 patients, 13 (5.1%) experienced index admission mortality. Of the patients not suffering mortality, 74 (31.6%) experienced composite morbidity. Only MCHD predicted mortality (p = 0.001); birth weight did not (p = 0.173). There was no difference between the Spitz classification and MCHD alone in predicting mortality risk (p = 0.198); both demonstrated very good discrimination. Prenatal diagnosis, POMV, prematurity, and male sex predicted composite morbidity risk (p < 0.001; p = 0.008; p = 0.009; p = 0.05). An algorithm incorporating these predictors demonstrated good discrimination (AUC = 0.784; 95% CI: 0.724, 0.844).

Conclusions

The Spitz classification maintains contemporary relevance for mortality risk, though birth weight can be de-emphasized. A new morbidity risk algorithm is proposed for early postnatal counseling.

Type of Study

Prognosis study.

Level of Evidence

Level IV.

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