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Evaluation of Methods for Extrapolating or Estimating the Size of Children in Pediatric Intensive Care (EvTaReaP)

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Civil Hospices of Lyon

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

Treatments

Other: Size Measurement using a measuring tape, a caliper and a metric

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03913247
69HCL19_0031

Details and patient eligibility

About

Size is a key data used daily by dietary teams; the paramedical team, nurse and diet are in charge of its measures.

In pediatric intensive care unit, a reliable size of the child must be obtained. It allows to realize:

  • a nutritional assessment based on the World Health Organization (WHO) nutritional indices such as the Body Mass Index (BMI), growth chart monitoring and other nutritional indices. Nutritional status should be assessed and followed in pediatric intensive care as it is correlated with the prognosis of children.
  • an estimate of the energy needs by calculation of the rest energy expenditure.
  • a calculation of the body surface, useful for drug prescription, evaluation of burn scores, calculation of water and energy requirements and indexing of hemodynamic and ventilatory data.

An error in size measurement results in an error in BMI, calculation of energy requirements, and body surface area.

The WHO has defined "gold standard" criteria for measuring height in children, distinguishing the less than two years in whom the size is measured strictly lengthened, using a metric, and the more than two years in which height is measured standing with a stadiometer. In the context of pediatric resuscitation, the criteria for WHO size measurement are difficult to meet (coma, sedation, respiratory assistance, catheter, monitoring, proclive position, etc.) compromising standing or rectitude required for measurements.

The child is a growing organism. Health book sizes and declarative sizes are not always up-to-date.

It is therefore important to overcome these difficulties by using estimating or extrapolation methods that are applicable and safe in pediatric intensive care unit.

Currently, in pediatric intensive care units, the size evaluation, by direct measurement, estimation or extrapolation of segmental measurement, is not systematic because of the complexity of the measurement; To date, no method is used as a reference method in pediatric intensive care.

Among Children in pediatric intensive care unit (which does not usually meet the criteria of the WHO Gold Standard for Measurement of Height), to determine the optimal method for size measurement, by comparing different methods of estimating / extrapolating the size, gold standard WHO (achievable after the stay in intensive care).

Enrollment

477 patients

Sex

All

Ages

28 days to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children aged from 28 days to 18 years old.
  • Admitted in pediatric intensive care unit with a resuscitation situation (at least one system failure including respiratory and/or hemodynamic and/or neurological).
  • Children whose size was not measurable, at the time of the admission in pediatric intensive care unit according to WHO standards.
  • Patient affiliated to a social security system

Exclusion criteria

  • No expected evolution to a clinical state allowing the size measure according to the WHO standards according to age.
  • Stature growth greater (defined by WHO growth velocity scale according to age and sex) than 5% before the expected delay allowing the size measure using the WHO standards according to age
  • Children with skeleton malformation, dwarfism, abnormal limb.
  • Expected death before the end of the stay in pediatric intensive care unit
  • Parents or patients able to answer, refusing to participate to the study

Trial design

477 participants in 1 patient group

Group with different size measures
Description:
Each patient included in the study will have different measure of size.
Treatment:
Other: Size Measurement using a measuring tape, a caliper and a metric

Trial contacts and locations

10

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Central trial contact

Carole Ford-Chessel; Julien Berthiller

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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