학술논문

European study showed that children with congenital anomalies often underwent multiple surgical procedures at different ages across Europe.
Document Type
Article
Source
Acta Paediatrica. Jun2023, Vol. 112 Issue 6, p1304-1311. 8p.
Subject
*OPERATIVE surgery
*CONGENITAL disorders
*CLEFT palate children
*HUMAN abnormalities
*PEDIATRIC surgery
Language
ISSN
0803-5253
Abstract
Aim: Children with congenital anomalies often require surgery but data on the burden of surgery for these children are limited. Methods: A population‐based record‐linkage study in Finland, Wales and regions of Denmark, England, Italy and Spain. A total of 91 504 children with congenital anomalies born in 1995–2014 were followed to their tenth birthday or the end of 2015. Electronic linkage to hospital databases provided data on inpatient surgical procedures and meta‐analyses of surgical procedures were performed by age groups. Results: The percentage of children having surgery in the first year was 38% with some differences across regions and 14% also underwent surgery at age 1–4 years. Regional differences in age at the time of their first surgical procedure were observed for children with cleft palate, hydronephrosis, hypospadias, clubfoot and craniosynostosis. The children had a median of 2.0 (95% CI 1.98, 2.02) surgical procedures before age 5 years with children with oesophageal atresia having the highest median number of procedures (4.5; 95% CI 3.3, 5.8). Conclusion: A third of children with congenital anomalies required surgery during infancy and often more than one procedure was needed before age 5 years. There was no European consensus on the preferred age for surgery for some anomalies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]