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Browsing by Author "Saito, Jacqueline M."
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Item Accuracy of Chest Computed Tomography in Distinguishing Cystic Pleuropulmonary Blastoma From Benign Congenital Lung Malformations in Children(American Medical Association, 2022-06-01) Engwall-Gill, Abigail J.; Chan, Sherwin S.; Boyd, Kevin P.; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Fallat, Mary E.; St. Peter, Shawn D.; Bolger-Theut, Stephanie; Crotty, Eric J.; Green, Jared R.; Hulett Bowling, Rebecca L.; Kumbhar, Sachin S.; Rattan, Mantosh S.; Young, Cody M.; Canner, Joseph K.; Deans, Katherine J.; Gadepalli, Samir K.; Helmrath, Michael A.; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Kabre, Rashmi; Lal, Dave R.; Landman, Matthew P.; Leys, Charles M.; Mak, Grace Z.; Minneci, Peter C.; Wright, Tiffany N.; Kunisaki, Shaun M.; Midwest Pediatric Surgery Consortium; Surgery, School of MedicineImportance: The ability of computed tomography (CT) to distinguish between benign congenital lung malformations and malignant cystic pleuropulmonary blastomas (PPBs) is unclear. Objective: To assess whether chest CT can detect malignant tumors among postnatally detected lung lesions in children. Design, setting, and participants: This retrospective multicenter case-control study used a consortium database of 521 pathologically confirmed primary lung lesions from January 1, 2009, through December 31, 2015, to assess diagnostic accuracy. Preoperative CT scans of children with cystic PPB (cases) were selected and age-matched with CT scans from patients with postnatally detected congenital lung malformations (controls). Statistical analysis was performed from January 18 to September 6, 2020. Preoperative CT scans were interpreted independently by 9 experienced pediatric radiologists in a blinded fashion and analyzed from January 24, 2019, to September 6, 2020. Main outcomes and measures: Accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of CT in correctly identifying children with malignant tumors. Results: Among 477 CT scans identified (282 boys [59%]; median age at CT, 3.6 months [IQR, 1.2-7.2 months]; median age at resection, 6.9 months [IQR, 4.2-12.8 months]), 40 cases were extensively reviewed; 9 cases (23%) had pathologically confirmed cystic PPB. The median age at CT was 7.3 months (IQR, 2.9-22.4 months), and median age at resection was 8.7 months (IQR, 5.0-24.4 months). The sensitivity of CT for detecting PPB was 58%, and the specificity was 83%. High suspicion for malignancy correlated with PPB pathology (odds ratio, 13.5; 95% CI, 2.7-67.3; P = .002). There was poor interrater reliability (κ = 0.36 [range, 0.06-0.64]; P < .001) and no significant difference in specific imaging characteristics between PPB and benign cystic lesions. The overall accuracy rate for distinguishing benign vs malignant lesions was 81%. Conclusions and relevance: This study suggests that chest CT, the current criterion standard imaging modality to assess the lung parenchyma, may not accurately and reliably distinguish PPB from benign congenital lung malformations in children. In any cystic lung lesion without a prenatal diagnosis, operative management to confirm pathologic diagnosis is warranted.Item Association of Nonoperative Management Using Antibiotic Therapy vs Laparoscopic Appendectomy With Treatment Success and Disability Days in Children With Uncomplicated Appendicitis(American Medical Association, 2020-08) Minneci, Peter C.; Hade, Erinn M.; Lawrence, Amy E.; Sebastião, Yuri V.; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Mak, Grace Z.; Fox, Christa; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Gadepalli, Samir; Helmrath, Michael A.; Kohler, Jonathan E.; Leys, Charles M.; Sato, Thomas T.; Lal, Dave R.; Landman, Matthew P.; Kabre, Rashmi; Fallat, Mary E.; Cooper, Jennifer N.; Deans, Katherine J.; Surgery, School of MedicineImportance: Nonoperative management with antibiotics alone has the potential to treat uncomplicated pediatric appendicitis with fewer disability days than surgery. Objective: To determine the success rate of nonoperative management and compare differences in treatment-related disability, satisfaction, health-related quality of life, and complications between nonoperative management and surgery in children with uncomplicated appendicitis. Design, setting, and participants: Multi-institutional nonrandomized controlled intervention study of 1068 children aged 7 through 17 years with uncomplicated appendicitis treated at 10 tertiary children's hospitals across 7 US states between May 2015 and October 2018 with 1-year follow-up through October 2019. Of the 1209 eligible patients approached, 1068 enrolled in the study. Interventions: Patient and family selection of nonoperative management with antibiotics alone (nonoperative group, n = 370) or urgent (≤12 hours of admission) laparoscopic appendectomy (surgery group, n = 698). Main outcomes and measures: The 2 primary outcomes assessed at 1 year were disability days, defined as the total number of days the child was not able to participate in all of his/her normal activities secondary to appendicitis-related care (expected difference, 5 days), and success rate of nonoperative management, defined as the proportion of patients initially managed nonoperatively who did not undergo appendectomy by 1 year (lowest acceptable success rate, ≥70%). Inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to adjust for differences between treatment groups for all outcome assessments. Results: Among 1068 patients who were enrolled (median age, 12.4 years; 38% girls), 370 (35%) chose nonoperative management and 698 (65%) chose surgery. A total of 806 (75%) had complete follow-up: 284 (77%) in the nonoperative group; 522 (75%) in the surgery group. Patients in the nonoperative group were more often younger (median age, 12.3 years vs 12.5 years), Black (9.6% vs 4.9%) or other race (14.6% vs 8.7%), had caregivers with a bachelor's degree (29.8% vs 23.5%), and underwent diagnostic ultrasound (79.7% vs 74.5%). After IPTW, the success rate of nonoperative management at 1 year was 67.1% (96% CI, 61.5%-72.31%; P = .86). Nonoperative management was associated with significantly fewer patient disability days at 1 year than did surgery (adjusted mean, 6.6 vs 10.9 days; mean difference, -4.3 days (99% CI, -6.17 to -2.43; P < .001). Of 16 other prespecified secondary end points, 10 showed no significant difference. Conclusion and relevance: Among children with uncomplicated appendicitis, an initial nonoperative management strategy with antibiotics alone had a success rate of 67.1% and, compared with urgent surgery, was associated with statistically significantly fewer disability days at 1 year. However, there was substantial loss to follow-up, the comparison with the prespecified threshold for an acceptable success rate of nonoperative management was not statistically significant, and the hypothesized difference in disability days was not met.Item Can Fecal Continence be Predicted in Patients Born with Anorectal Malformations?(Elsevier, 2019) Minneci, Peter C.; Kabre, Rashmi S.; Mak, Grace Z.; Halleran, Devin R.; Cooper, Jennifer N.; Afrazi, Amin; Calkins, Casey M.; Corkum, Kristine; Downard, Cynthia D.; Ehrlich, Peter; Fraser, Jason D.; Gadepalli, Samir K.; Helmrath, Michael A.; Kohler, Jonathan E.; Landisch, Rachel; Landman, Matthew P.; Lee, Constance; Leys, Charles M.; Lodwick, Daniel L.; McLeod, Jennifer; Mon, Rodrigo; McClure, Beth; Rymeski, Beth; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Sato, Thomas T.; St. Peter, Shawn D.; Wood, Richard; Levitt, Marc A.; Deans, Katherine J.; Surgery, School of MedicinePurpose The purpose of this study was to identify factors associated with attaining fecal continence in children with anorectal malformations (ARM). Methods We performed a multi-institutional cohort study of children born with ARM in 2007–2011 who had spinal and sacral imaging. Questions from the Baylor Social Continence Scale were used to assess fecal continence at the age of ≥ 4 years. Factors present at birth that predicted continence were identified using multivariable logistic regression. Results Among 144 ARM patients with a median age of 7 years (IQR 6–8), 58 (40%) were continent. The rate of fecal continence varied by ARM subtype (p = 0.002) with the highest rate of continence in patients with perineal fistula (60%). Spinal anomalies and the lateral sacral ratio were not associated with continence. On multivariable analysis, patients with less severe ARM subtypes (perineal fistula, recto-bulbar fistula, recto-vestibular fistula, no fistula, rectal stenosis) were more likely to be continent (OR = 7.4, p = 0.001). Conclusion Type of ARM was the only factor that predicted fecal continence in children with ARM. The high degree of incontinence, even in the least severe subtypes, highlights that predicting fecal continence is difficult at birth and supports the need for long-term follow-up and bowel management programs for children with ARM.Item Changing the Paradigm for Management of Pediatric Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax: A Simple Aspiration Test Predicts Need for Operation(Elsevier, 2019) Leys, Charles M.; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Kohler, Jonathan E.; Cherney-Stafford, Linda; Marka, Nicholas; Fallat, Mary E.; Gadepalli, Samir K.; Fraser, Jason D.; Grabowski, Julia; Burns, R. Cartland; Downard, Cynthia D.; Foley, David S.; Halleran, Devin R.; Helmrath, Michael A.; Kabre, Rashmi; Knezevich, Michellle S.; Lal, Dave R.; Landman, Matthew P.; Lawrence, Amy E.; Mak, Grace Z.; Minneci, Peter C.; Musili, Ninette; Rymeski, Beth; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Sato, Thomas T.; St. Peter, Shawn D.; Warner, Brad W.; Ostlie, Daniel J.; Surgery, School of MedicinePurpose Chest tube (CT) management for pediatric primary spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP) is associated with long hospital stays and high recurrence rates. To streamline management, we explored simple aspiration as a test to predict need for surgery. Methods A multi-institution, prospective pilot study of patients with first presentation for PSP at 9 children’s hospitals was performed. Aspiration was performed through a pigtail catheter, followed by 6 h observation with CT clamped. If pneumothorax recurred during observation, the aspiration test failed and subsequent management was per surgeon discretion. Results Thirty-three patients were managed with simple aspiration. Aspiration was successful in 16 of 33 (48%), while 17 (52%) failed the aspiration test and required hospitalization. Twelve who failed aspiration underwent CT management, of which 10 (83%) failed CT management owing to either persistent air leak requiring VATS or subsequent PSP recurrence. Recurrence rate was significantly greater in the group that failed aspiration compared to the group that passed aspiration [10/12 (83%) vs 7/16 (44%), respectively, P = 0.028]. Conclusion Simple aspiration test upon presentation with PSP predicts chest tube failure with 83% positive predictive value. We recommend changing the PSP management algorithm to include an initial simple aspiration test, and if that fails, proceed directly to VATS.Item Current operative management of congenital lobar emphysema in children: A report from the Midwest Pediatric Surgery Consortium(Elsevier, 2019) Kunisaki, Shaun M.; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Fallat, Mary E.; St. Peter, Shawn D.; Kim, Aimee G.; Johnson, Kevin N.; Mon, Rodrigo A.; Adams, Cheryl; Aladegbami, Bola; Bence, Christina; Burns, R. Cartland; Corkum, Kristine S.; Deans, Katherine J.; Downard, Cynthia D.; Fraser, Jason D.; Gadepalli, Samir K.; Helmrath, Michael A.; Kabre, Rashmi; Lal, Dave R.; Landman, Matthew P.; Leys, Charles M.; Linden, Allison F.; Lopez, Joseph J.; Mak, Grace Z.; Minneci, Peter C.; Rademacher, Brooks L.; Shaaban, Aimen; Walker, Sarah K.; Wright, Tiffany N.; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Surgery, School of MedicinePurpose The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical presentation and operative outcomes of patients with congenital lobar emphysema (CLE) within a large multicenter research consortium. Methods After central reliance IRB-approval, a retrospective cohort study was performed on all operatively managed lung malformations at eleven participating children's hospitals (2009–2015). Results Fifty-three (10.5%) children with pathology-confirmed CLE were identified among 506 lung malformations. A lung mass was detected prenatally in 13 (24.5%) compared to 331 (73.1%) in non-CLE cases (p < 0.0001). Thirty-two (60.4%) CLE patients presented with respiratory symptoms at birth compared to 102 (22.7%) in non-CLE (p < 0.0001). The most common locations for CLE were the left upper (n = 24, 45.3%), right middle (n = 16, 30.2%), and right upper (n = 10, 18.9%) lobes. Eighteen (34.0%) had resection as neonates, 30 (56.6%) had surgery at 1–12 months of age, and five (9.4%) had resections after 12 months. Six (11.3%) underwent thoracoscopic excision. Median hospital length of stay was 5.0 days (interquartile range, 4.0–13.0). Conclusions Among lung malformations, CLE is associated with several unique features, including a low prenatal detection rate, a predilection for the upper/middle lobes, and infrequent utilization of thoracoscopy. Although respiratory distress at birth is common, CLE often presents clinically in a delayed and more insidious fashion.Item Demographic and Clinical Characteristics Associated With the Failure of Nonoperative Management of Uncomplicated Appendicitis in Children: Secondary Analysis of a Nonrandomized Clinical Trial(JAMA, 2022-05-02) Minneci, Peter C.; Hade, Erinn M.; Gil, Lindsay A.; Metzger, Gregory A.; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Mak, Grace Z.; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Gadepalli, Samir; Helmrath, Michael A.; Leys, Charles M.; Sato, Thomas T.; Lal, Dave R.; Landman, Matthew P.; Kabre, Rashmi; Fallat, Mary E.; Cooper, Jennifer N.; Deans, Katherine J.; Midwest Pediatric Surgery Consortium; Surgery, School of MedicineImportance: The factors associated with the failure of nonoperative management of appendicitis and the differences in patient-reported outcomes between successful and unsuccessful nonoperative management remain unknown. Objectives: To investigate factors associated with the failure of nonoperative management of appendicitis and compare patient-reported outcomes between patients whose treatment succeeded and those whose treatment failed. Design, setting, and participants: This study was a planned subgroup secondary analysis conducted in 10 children's hospitals that included 370 children aged 7 to 17 years with uncomplicated appendicitis enrolled in a prospective, nonrandomized clinical trial between May 1, 2015, and October 31, 2018, with 1-year follow-up comparing nonoperative management with antibiotics vs surgery for uncomplicated appendicitis. Statistical analysis was performed from November 1, 2019, to February 12, 2022. Interventions: Nonoperative management with antibiotics vs surgery. Main outcomes and measures: Failure of nonoperative management and patient-reported outcomes. The relative risk (RR) of failure based on sociodemographic and clinical characteristics was calculated. Patient-reported outcomes were compared based on the success or failure of nonoperative management. Results: Of 370 patients (34.6% of 1068 total patients; 229 boys [61.9%]; median age, 12.3 years [IQR, 10.0-14.6 years]) enrolled in the nonoperative group, treatment failure occurred for 125 patients (33.8%) at 1 year, with 53 patients (14.3%) undergoing appendectomy during initial hospitalization and 72 patients (19.5%) experiencing delayed treatment failure after hospital discharge. Higher patient-reported pain at presentation was associated with increased risk of in-hospital treatment failure (RR, 2.1 [95% CI, 1.0-4.4]) but not delayed treatment failure (RR, 1.3 [95% CI, 0.7-2.3]) or overall treatment failure at 1 year (RR, 1.5 [95% CI, 1.0-2.2]). Pain duration greater than 24 hours was associated with decreased risk of delayed treatment failure (RR, 0.3 [95% CI, 0.1-1.0]) but not in-hospital treatment failure (RR, 1.2 [95% CI, 0.5-2.7]) or treatment failure at 1 year (RR, 0.7 [95% CI, 0.4-1.2]). There was no increased risk of treatment failure associated with age, white blood cell count, sex, race, ethnicity, primary language, insurance status, transfer status, symptoms at presentation, or imaging results. Health care satisfaction at 30 days and patient-reported, health-related quality of life at 30 days and 1 year were not different. Satisfaction with the decision was higher with successful nonoperative management at 30 days (28.0 vs 27.0; difference, 1.0 [95% CI, 0.01-2.0]) and 1 year (28.1 vs 27.0; difference, 1.1 [95% CI, 0.2-2.0]). Conclusions and relevance: This analysis suggests that a higher pain level at presentation was associated with a higher risk of initial failure of nonoperative management and that a longer duration of pain was associated with lower risk of delayed treatment failure. Although satisfaction was high in both groups, satisfaction with the treatment decision was higher among patients with successful nonoperative management at 1 year.Item Development of a multi-institutional registry for children with operative congenital lung malformations(Elsevier, 2019) Kunisaki, Shaun M.; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Fallat, Mary E.; St. Peter, Shawn D.; Lal, Dave R.; Johnson, Kevin N.; Mon, Rodrigo A.; Adams, Cheryl; Aladegbami, Bola; Bence, Christina; Burns, R. Cartland; Corkum, Kristine S.; Deans, Katherine J.; Downard, Cynthia D.; Fraser, Jason D.; Gadepalli, Samir K.; Helmrath, Michael A.; Kabre, Rashmi; Landman, Matthew P.; Leys, Charles M.; Linden, Allison F.; Lopez, Joseph J.; Mak, Grace Z.; Minneci, Peter C.; Rademacher, Brooks L.; Shaaban, Aimen; Walker, Sarah K.; Wright, Tiffany N.; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Surgery, School of MedicineIntroduction The purpose of this study was to develop a multi-institutional registry to characterize the demographics, management, and outcomes of a contemporary cohort of children undergoing congenital lung malformation (CLM) resection. Methods After central reliance IRB approval, a web-based, secure database was created to capture retrospective cohort data on pathologically-confirmed CLMs performed between 2009 and 2015 within a multi-institutional research collaborative. Results Eleven children's hospitals contributed 506 patients. Among 344 prenatally diagnosed lesions, the congenital pulmonary airway malformation volume ratio was measured in 49.1%, and fetal MRI was performed in 34.3%. One hundred thirty-four (26.7%) children had respiratory symptoms at birth. Fifty-eight (11.6%) underwent neonatal resection, 322 (64.1%) had surgery at 1–12 months, and 122 (24.3%) had operations after 12 months. The median age at resection was 6.7 months (interquartile range, 3.6–11.4). Among 230 elective lobectomies performed in asymptomatic patients, thoracoscopy was successfully utilized in 102 (44.3%), but there was substantial variation across centers. The most common lesions were congenital pulmonary airway malformation (n = 234, 47.3%) and intralobar bronchopulmonary sequestration (n = 106, 21.4%). Conclusion This multicenter cohort study on operative CLMs highlights marked disease heterogeneity and substantial practice variation in preoperative evaluation and operative management. Future registry studies are planned to help establish evidence-based guidelines to optimize the care of these patients.Item Infants with esophageal atresia and right aortic arch: Characteristics and outcomes from the Midwest Pediatric Surgery Consortium(Elsevier, 2018) Lal, Dave R.; Gadepalli, Samir K.; Downard, Cynthia D.; Minneci, Peter C.; Knezevich, Michelle; Chelius, Thomas H.; Rapp, Cooper T.; Bilmire, Deborah; Bruch, Steven; Burns, R. Carland; Deans, Katherine J.; Fallat, Mary E.; Fraser, Jason D.; Grabowski, Julia; Hebel, Ferdynand; Helmrath, Michael A.; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Kabre, Rashmi; Kohler, Jonathan; Landman, Matthew P.; Leys, Charles M.; Mak, Grace Z.; Ostlie, Daniel J.; Raque, Jessica; Rymeski, Beth; Saito, Jacqueline M.; St. Peter, Shawn D.; von Allmen, Daniel; Warner, Brad W.; Sato, Thomas T.; Surgery, School of MedicinePurpose Right sided aortic arch (RAA) is a rare anatomic finding in infants with esophageal atresia with or without tracheoesophageal fistula (EA/TEF). In the presence of RAA, significant controversy exists regarding optimal side for thoracotomy in repair of the EA/TEF. The purpose of this study was to characterize the incidence, demographics, surgical approach, and outcomes of patients with RAA and EA/TEF. Methods A multi-institutional, IRB approved, retrospective cohort study of infants with EA/TEF treated at 11 children's hospitals in the United States over a 5-year period (2009 to 2014) was performed. All patients had a minimum of one-year follow-up. Results In a cohort of 396 infants with esophageal atresia, 20 (5%) had RAA, with 18 having EA with a distal TEF and 2 with pure EA. Compared to infants with left sided arch (LAA), RAA infants had a lower median birth weight, (1.96 kg (IQR 1.54–2.65) vs. 2.57 kg (2.00–3.03), p = 0.01), earlier gestational age (34.5 weeks (IQR 32–37) vs. 37 weeks (35–39), p = 0.01), and a higher incidence of congenital heart disease (90% vs. 32%, p < 0.0001). The most common cardiac lesions in the RAA group were ventricular septal defect (7), tetralogy of Fallot (7) and vascular ring (5). Seventeen infants with RAA underwent successful EA repair, 12 (71%) via right thoracotomy and 5 (29%) through left thoracotomy. Anastomotic strictures trended toward a difference in RAA patients undergoing right thoracotomy for primary repair of their EA/TEF compared to left thoracotomy (50% vs. 0%, p = 0.1). Side of thoracotomy in RAA patients undergoing EA/TEF repair was not significantly associated with mortality, anastomotic leak, recurrent laryngeal nerve injury, recurrent fistula, or esophageal dehiscence (all p > 0.29). Conclusion RAA in infants with EA/TEF is rare with an incidence of 5%. Compared to infants with EA/TEF and LAA, infants with EA/TEF and RAA are more severely ill with lower birth weight and higher rates of prematurity and complex congenital heart disease. In neonates with RAA, surgical repair of the EA/TEF is technically feasible via thoracotomy from either chest. A higher incidence of anastomotic strictures may occur with a right-sided approach.Item Multi-institutional trial of non-operative management and surgery for uncomplicated appendicitis in children: Design and rationale(Elsevier, 2019-08-01) Minneci, Peter C.; Hade, Erinn M.; Lawrence, Amy E.; Saito, Jacqueline M.; Mak, Grace Z.; Hirschl, Ronald B.; Gadepalli, Samir; Helmrath, Michael A.; Leys, Charles M.; Sato, Thomas T.; Lal, Dave R.; Landman, Matthew P.; Kabre, Rashmi; Fallat, Mary E.; Fischer, Beth A.; Cooper, Jennifer N.; Deans, Katherine J.; Surgery, School of MedicineTraditionally, children presenting with appendicitis are referred for urgent appendectomy. Recent improvements in the quality and availability of diagnostic imaging allow for better pre-operative characterization of appendicitis, including severity of inflammation; size of the appendix; and presence of extra-luminal inflammation, phlegmon, or abscess. These imaging advances, in conjunction with the availability of broad spectrum oral antibiotics, allow for the identification of a subset of patients with uncomplicated appendicitis that can be successfully treated with antibiotics alone. Recent studies demonstrated that antibiotics alone are a safe and efficacious treatment alternative for patents with uncomplicated appendicitis. The objective of this study is to perform a multi-institutional trial to examine the effectiveness of non-operative management of uncomplicated pediatric appendicitis across a group of large children’s hospitals. A prospective patient choice design was chosen to compare non-operative management to surgery in order to assess effectiveness in a broad population representative of clinical practice in which non-operative management is offered as an alternative to surgery. The risks and benefits of each treatment are very different and a “successful” treatment depends on which risks and benefits are most important to each patient and his/her family. The patient-choice design allows for alignment of preferences with treatment. Patients meeting eligibility criteria are offered a choice of non-operative management or appendectomy. Primary outcomes include determining the success rate of non-operative management and comparing differences in disability days, and secondarily, complication rates, quality of life, and healthcare satisfaction, between patients choosing non-operative management and those choosing appendectomy.