Abstract

IntroductionThe objective of our study was to evaluate the impact of the publication of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) practice parameters for SGA metabolic monitoring in 2011 on SGA metabolic monitoring uptake among pediatric SGA recipients. MethodsThis was a retrospective study of children 1–17 years of age who initiated SGA treatment from Jan 2010 to December 2018 using a national Electronic Medical Records database. A segmented regression of interrupted time-series (ITS) analysis was conducted to analyze the change of metabolic monitoring rates for Body Mass Index (BMI), Blood Glucose (BG), and Total Cholesterol (CHL) 9 quarters pre- and 26 quarters post-the publication of the AACAP practice parameters. ResultsThe analytical cohort included 9620 children and adolescents who initiated SGA treatment during the study period. The ITS results showed that the publication of the AACAP practice parameter for SGA metabolic monitoring was associated with a 12.61 percentage points (p < 0.0002) immediate increase in BMI monitoring rate, (increased from 29.10% in Q4 2011 to 40.10% in Q3 2012). There was a positive trend of BMI monitoring rate prior to the publication of AACAP practice parameters, which continued during the post-publication period. Neither immediate nor sustained changes in the association of monitoring rates for BG and CHL were observed after the issuance of the guidelines. ConclusionThe publication of AACAP practice parameters for SGA monitoring was associated with a significant improvement in the monitoring for BMI, but not for BG and CHL in children and adolescents.

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