Abstract

ObjectivesDescribe changes in the diagnostic approach and treatment for pediatric intussusception over two decades. Study designAdministrative universal healthcare data were used to conduct a population-based cohort study of intussusception between January 1997 and December 2016 in Ontario, Canada.A validated case definition was used to identify all patients (<18 years) treated for intussusception in the province at community or tertiary care centers. Treatment modality was determined using physician billing data and databases linked at ICES; it was categorized as nonoperative alone, surgical alone, or failed nonoperative. Descriptive statistics, Cochrane–Armitage for trend analyses, and graphical and multinomial logistic regression were performed. ResultsOver 20 years, 1895 pediatric patients were treated for intussusception. Pretreatment imaging use rose from 57.5% to 99.3%. Nonoperative management increased from 23.4% to 75.2%. However, 43% of children who presented to a community hospital underwent immediate surgical management, compared with just 11% of children at tertiary centers (RR 0.39, 95% CI: 0.25–0.62). Among children who underwent surgery, there was an increase in bowel resection over time (41.7% to 57.6%). ConclusionsOver the 20 year period of study, pretreatment imaging became universal, and management shifted from predominantly surgical to nonoperative reduction in Ontario. The rate of surgical intervention remains higher in community versus tertiary centers. Level of evidenceTreatment study, III.

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