Abstract

BackgroundThe coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic had a relatively minimal direct impact on critical illness in children compared to adults. However, children and paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) were affected indirectly. We analysed the impact of the pandemic on PICU admission patterns and patient characteristics in the UK and Ireland.MethodsWe performed a retrospective cohort study of all admissions to PICUs in children < 18 years during Jan–Dec 2020, using data collected from 32 PICUs via a central database (PICANet). Admission patterns, case-mix, resource use, and outcomes were compared with the four preceding years (2016–2019) based on the date of admission.ResultsThere were 16,941 admissions in 2020 compared to an annual average of 20,643 (range 20,340–20,868) from 2016 to 2019. During 2020, there was a reduction in all PICU admissions (18%), unplanned admissions (20%), planned admissions (15%), and bed days (25%). There was a 41% reduction in respiratory admissions, and a 60% reduction in children admitted with bronchiolitis but an 84% increase in admissions for diabetic ketoacidosis during 2020 compared to the previous years. There were 420 admissions (2.4%) with either PIMS-TS or COVID-19 during 2020. Age and sex adjusted prevalence of unplanned PICU admission reduced from 79.7 (2016–2019) to 63.1 per 100,000 in 2020. Median probability of death [1.2 (0.5–3.4) vs. 1.2 (0.5–3.4) %], length of stay [2.3 (1.0–5.5) vs. 2.4 (1.0–5.7) days] and mortality rates [3.4 vs. 3.6%, (risk-adjusted OR 1.00 [0.91–1.11, p = 0.93])] were similar between 2016–2019 and 2020. There were 106 fewer in-PICU deaths in 2020 (n = 605) compared with 2016–2019 (n = 711).ConclusionsThe use of a high-quality international database allowed robust comparisons between admission data prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic. A significant reduction in prevalence of unplanned admissions, respiratory diseases, and fewer child deaths in PICU observed may be related to the targeted COVID-19 public health interventions during the pandemic. However, analysis of wider and longer-term societal impact of the pandemic and public health interventions on physical and mental health of children is required.

Highlights

  • The coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic had a relatively minimal direct impact on critical illness in children compared to adults

  • The admission dataset includes information related to patient demographics, diagnoses, interventions included in the paediatric critical care minimum dataset, and vital status at discharge from paediatric intensive care units (PICUs), as well as severity of illness variables at the time of admission for calculation of the Paediatric Index of Mortality-3 (PIM3) score [10]

  • Admissions and bed activity During 2020, only 16,941 PICU admissions were observed compared to a mean of 20,643 per year over the period 2016–2019

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Summary

Introduction

The coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic had a relatively minimal direct impact on critical illness in children compared to adults. Children and paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) were affected indirectly. Kanthimathinathan et al Crit Care (2021) 25:399 paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admission with either acute COVID-19, or related conditions such as the novel post-covid inflammatory syndrome referred to as paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 (PIMS-TS) or multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), was small in comparison with the number of adults requiring critical care admission following SARS-CoV-2 infection [2, 3]. We aimed to analyse whether PICU activity in 2020 differed from the previous years across the whole of theUK and Republic of Ireland (RoI) using the paediatric intensive care audit network (PICANet) database. We aimed to analyse the nature and magnitude of differences in admissions, bed-activity, case-mix, interventions, and outcomes of PICU admissions during 2020, compared with preceding years

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