Variation in Treatment and Clinical Outcome of Primary Rhabdomyolysis in Children's Hospitals

Document Type

Conference Proceeding - Restricted Access

Publication Date

5-9-2025

Abstract

Rhabdomyolysis is a common pediatric diagnosis with a highly variable presentation. Recent data shows pediatric hospitalizations for primary rhabdomyolysis have increased in the last decade. The American Academy of Pediatrics released a review article in 2020 that provided general guidelines for treatment of rhabdomyolysis. These guidelines are helpful but lack standardization of care and are ambiguous about treatment specifics including types of intravenous fluids (IV), specific pain control regimens, and lab and imaging diagnostic work up required. Standardization of care is linked to positive outcomes, but to achieve this goal, we must first understand the variation of care.

This was a retrospective cross-sectional study utilizing data from the Pediatric Health Information System (PHIS) database of patients aged 0-18 years with the primary discharge diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis who were admitted between January 2020 to December 2023. Our outcomes were adjusted for differences in age, race, payor, number of complex chronic conditions (CCC), and Hospitalization Resource Intensity Score for Kids (H-RISK).

3779 cases across 36 children's hospitals met inclusion criteria. Fluids were received by a median 86.4% (IQR: 60.2%-89.6%) across the hospitals. A variety of IV fluids were used with the most common being sodium chloride by a median (67.1%), followed by dextrose and sodium chloride (45.1%), dextrose and sodium chloride with potassium chloride (14.2%), and dextrose in water (10.4%). Acetaminophen was the most used analgesic medication (47.8%), followed by NSAIDs (26.9%), and opioids (11.3%). Use of mannitol was uncommon with only 0.2% of total cases studied receiving it. Use of imaging studies was observed in all 36 hospitals and occurred in 31.1% (IQR 26%-35.7%). When adjusted, there was no statistical difference in LOS (55.7 hours), or emergency department return rate (1.5%) between the high, medium, and lower utilizer groups. There was a statistically significant decrease in the 7-day readmission rate in the medium utilizer group when compared to the high utilizer group (Odds Ratio 0.57, 95% CI: 0.33-0.96).

There was wide variation across hospitals in all aspects of treatment for children hospitalized with rhabdomyolysis including fluid use, fluid type, and analgesic use. Furthermore, high resource utilization did not improve the measured clinical outcomes.

Comments

2025 Research Day Corewell Health West, Grand Rapids, MI, May 9, 2025. Abstract 1658

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS