Abstract
Purpose
Short-bowel syndrome (SBS) is associated with high morbidity and mortality. We conducted this study to establish the predictors of survival and weaning off parenteral nutrition (PN).
Methods
We reviewed the medical records of 16 SBS infants treated at our institution within a 30-year period. SBS was defined as a residual small-bowel length (RSBL) of <75 cm. Loss of the ileocecal valve (ICV), cholestasis (D-Bil >2.0 mg/dl), enterostomy, and RSBL were all evaluated. Kaplan–Meier analysis was used to analyze the predictors.
Results
The mean RSBL was 34.9 ± 22.9 cm. Six patients died (37.5%) and nine patients were weaned off PN (56.3%). Significant differences were observed in cholestasis (p < 0.03), enterostomy (p < 0.01), an absolute RSBL of <30 cm (p < 0.04), and a percentage of expected RSBL of <10% (p < 0.04) as survival predictors. Significant differences were also observed for cholestasis (p < 0.01), loss of the ICV (p < 0.04), an absolute RSBL of <20 cm (p < 0.01), and a percentage of expected RSBL of <10% (p < 0.03) as predictors of weaning off PN.
Conclusion
These predictors may help us select the optimal treatments for pediatric patients with SBS.
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