Pediatric critical care medicine : a journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies | 2019
Early Protocolized Versus Usual Care Rehabilitation for Pediatric Neurocritical Care Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE\ns: Few feasibility, safety, and efficacy data exist regarding ICU-based rehabilitative services for children. We hypothesized that early protocolized assessment and therapy would be feasible and safe versus usual care in pediatric neurocritical care patients.\n\n\nDESIGN\nRandomized controlled trial.\n\n\nSETTING\nThree tertiary care PICUs in the United States.\n\n\nPATIENTS\nFifty-eight children between the ages of 3-17 years with new traumatic or nontraumatic brain insult and expected ICU admission greater than 48 hours.\n\n\nINTERVENTIONS\nEarly protocolized (consultation of physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech and language therapy within 72\u2009hr ICU admission, n = 26) or usual care (consultation per treating team, n = 32).\n\n\nMEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS\nPrimary outcomes were consultation timing, treatment type, and frequency of deferrals and safety events. Secondary outcomes included patient and family functional and quality of life outcomes at 6 months. Comparing early protocolized (n = 26) and usual care groups (n = 32), physical therapy was consulted during the hospital admission in 26 of 26 versus 28 of 32 subjects (p = 0.062) on day 2.4\u2009±\u20090.8 versus 7.7\u2009±\u20094.8 (p = 0.001); occupational therapy in 26 of 26 versus 23 of 32 (p = 0.003), on day 2.3\u2009±\u20090.6 versus 6.9\u2009±\u20094.8 (p = 0.001); and speech and language therapy in 26 of 26 versus 17 of 32 (p = 0.011) on day 2.3\u2009±\u20090.7 versus 13.0\u2009±\u200910.8 (p = 0.026). More children in the early protocolized group had consults and treatments occur in the ICU versus ward for all three services (all p < 0.001). Eleven sessions were discontinued early: nine during physical therapy and two during occupational therapy, none impacting patient outcome. There were no group differences in functional or quality of life outcomes.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nA protocol for early personalized rehabilitation by physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech and language therapy in pediatric neurocritical care patients could be safely implemented and led to more ICU-based treatment sessions, accelerating the temporal profile and changing composition of interventions versus usual care, but not altering the total dose of rehabilitation.