DETERMINE THE RESEARCH PRIORITIES IN PEDIATRIC CANCER PATIENTS ADMITTED TO THE PEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT: AN INTERNATIONAL DELPHI CONSENSUS STUDY.

Presenter
  • Marijn Soeteman,
Authors
  • Marijn Soeteman,
  • Martine Van Grotel, United States of America
  • Eva Tschiedel, Germany
  • Christian Dohna-Schwake, Germany
  • Frederic Valla, France
  • Jef Willems, Belgium
  • Jeppe Sylvest Nielsen, Denmark
  • Martin Krause, Germany
  • Jenny Potratz, Germany
  • Sjef Van Gestel, United States of America
  • Patrick Marquis, Switzerland
  • Omer Aziz, United Kingdom
  • Joe Brierley, United Kingdom
  • Marry Van Den Heuvel-Eibrink, United States of America
  • Roelie M. Wösten-Van Asperen, Netherlands
Room
Exhibition Area
Date
19.06.2019
Session Time
10:00 - 16:00
Session Name
POSTER VIEWING 10: Health services research, administration, education, information technology
Presentation Time
07:00 - 18:00
Duration
1 Minute

Abstract

Background

Up to 40% of pediatric cancer patients require admission to PICU during the course of their disease. However, scarce are available on the standard of care in critical care delivery for this patient group, nor are systematic multi-center outcome data.

Objectives

To obtain consensus on the top five research priorities in the field of pediatric cancer patient critical care.

Methods

We conducted a three-round modified Delphi consensus process among pediatric intensivists and pediatric oncologists in Europe. An anonymous questionnaire was distributed online via SurveyMonkey. POKER consortium members drafted ten candidate research topics. Participants rated these topics using a 4-point scale. Research questions that met a priori consensus thresholds for >80% high priority were included in round 2, complemented with additional research topics suggested by participants. Round 2 yielded consensus on high prioritiy topics, which were ranked by POKER member in round 3 to create a final top five .

Results

One-hundred seventy-four and 154 colleagues participated in rounds 1 and 2, respectively (Fig. 1). Five research topics were identified as top priorities: (1) Optimal timing of the use of life-sustaining therapies; (2) Development of specific early warning scores; (3) Role of non-invasive ventilation in acute respiratory insufficiency; (4) End-of-life care and ethical issues; (5) Sepsis.

fig 1..jpg

Profession and country of residence of the participants.

Conclusion

Admissions of pediatric cancer patients contribute to a substantial proportion of critical care patient- and work-load. In particular, optimum use of critical care resources in this group is an area requiring urgent research.

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