Abstract

Patients with multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) often require hospital admission. Treatment of MIS-C has included intravenous immunoglobulin, systemic corticosteroids, and/or immunomodulators. There is no standardized approach to when steroids should be initiated during treatment. The study objective was to determine whether early initiation of steroids in patients with MIS-C is associated with the duration of hospital length of stay (LOS). This is a single-center retrospective cohort study of patients younger than 21 years who were hospitalized with MIS-C between March 2020 and September 2021 and received steroids. Cases were obtained from an institutional MIS-C log. Patients with culture proven sepsis and/or those who received intravenous immunoglobulin or steroids within the previous 30 days were excluded. We used a multivariable linear regression model, controlling for potential confounders, to assess the association between early steroids and LOS. A total of 56 patients hospitalized with MIS-C were identified; 38 received systemic corticosteroids and were included in the study. The mean time from admission to steroid administration was 9.8 hours (SD = 7.7) in the early group and 44.6 hours (SD = 14.2) in the late group. There was a statistically significant difference in baseline characteristics of patients receiving early versus late steroids in initial C-reactive peptide, procalcitonin, brain natriuretic peptide, and cardiac dysfunction. After controlling for confounders, initiating steroids within 24 hours of admission for MIS-C was associated with a decreased hospital LOS: in patients treated with early steroids, LOS was 58.3 hours less (95% confidence interval, -100.0 to -16.6; P = 0.007) than in those who received late steroids. Among patients with MIS-C, initiating systemic corticosteroids within 24 hours of admission was associated with decreased hospital LOS.

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