Pre-hospital intubation in paediatric patients with head injury

Date First Published:
July 17, 2018
Last Updated:
August 8, 2018
Report by:
Emma McLean, Medical Student (Imperial College London and St Mary's Hospital, London)
Search checked by:
Professor Ian Maconochie, Imperial College London and St Mary's Hospital, London
Three-Part Question:
In [Paediatric patients with head injury and needing prehospital airway management] is [endotracheal intubation better than bag and mask ventilation] for [improved survival and neurological outcome]
Clinical Scenario:
A 11yr old boy is involved in a pedestrian versus car traffic accident, sustaining head injuries with reduced consciousness. On scene he has a GCS of 6. He is intubated and brought to the major trauma centre emergency department. You wonder whether the evidence supports endotracheal intubation prehospitally for this patient.
Search Strategy:
Pubmed database 1966 – 16th May 2018
Medline using OVID interface 1966 – 16th May 2018
Search: ((((((Prehospital OR Pre-hospital)) AND (RSI OR Rapid sequence induction OR intubation)) AND (children OR paediatric)) AND ("brain injury" OR "head injury")))
Outcome:
Abstracts were read for 36 papers from Pubmed and 117 papers from the OVID interface

8 Papers were considered the most relevant and higher quality so were appraised in full.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
Efficacy of pre-hospital rapid sequence intubation in paediatric traumatic brain injury: A 9-year observational study. Heschl, Stefan et al. May-18 Australia Children <14yrs with suspected TBI
106 patients
Observational study with 6 month follow up Number intubated pre-hospital 87 intubated and 19 BVM. Head AISS similar in both groups Non-randomised study using registry data. Small sample size so results do not reach significance for all criteria
ICU and hospital length of stay ICU and hospital length of stay longer in those not intubated p=0.3
Functional outcome – Glasgow outcome scale 67% of intubated plus RSI had favourable functional outcome compared to 54% of non-intubated. 53 children at 6 month follow up data and from this group 66% of intubated vs. 17% non-intubated (p=0.06) had a favourable outcome
Prehospital interventions in severely injured pediatric patients: Rethinking the ABCs. Sokol, K et al. Dec-15 Camp Bastion Children <18yrs presenting to the camp. Stratified by severity of injury and TBI
766 patients
Retrospective data analysis Rate of pre-hospital airway interventions 8% of 766 required prehospital intubation Non-randomised study using pre-existing registry
Not just head injuries and primarily penetrating trauma which is more unusual in a civilian setting
Mortality In those with severe TBI endtracheal intubations were associated with higher unadjusted mortality (56% vs 20% p <0.01) On multivariate logistic regression model Prehospital intubation remained a strong predictor of mortality (OR 5.9 p = 0.001)
The BIG score and prediction of mortality in Pediatric blunt trauma. Davis, Adrienne et al. 2015 USA Children <18yrs
75% had head injuries
621 patients
Retrospective data analysis Mortality Independent mortality predictors were the BIG score (OR 11, 95% CI 6-25), prior fluid bolus (OR 3, 95% CI 1.3-9), and prior intubation(OR 8, 95% CI 2-40). 23.1% of survivors intubated prior to arrival and 90% of non-survivors intubated prior to arrival. Significance <0.001 Non-randomised study using pre-existing data
Study focus was primarily to look at BIG score but does have statistical power for pre-hospital intubation
No information on functional outcomes
Intubation of Pediatric trauma patients in the field: predictor of negative outcome despite risk stratification. DiRusso, S et al. 2005 USA Children <20yrs with major trauma
50,199 patients
Retrospective database study Mortality Unadjusted mortality 38.5% intubated prehospital compared to 13.2% if intubated at trauma centre. Stratified by degree of head injury statistically significant difference in mortality between in-field or trauma centre intubation. Consistent across all degrees of injury. Independent strong negative predictor of survival despite adjustment for severity of injury Non-randomised study from pre-existing data
Results for all injuries but some stratification by severity of injury and degree of head injury.
Functional outcome measured by discharge to home rather than validated score
Functional outcome – discharged to home Percentage of patients discharged home was reduced in the in-field intubation group across all degrees of head injury. Only statistically significant in moderate and mild head injury
The Impact of Prehospital endotracheal intubation on outcome in moderate to severe traumatic brain injury. Davis, D et al. 2005 USA All ages
13,625 patients
Retrospective database study Mortality Prehospital intubation is associated with a decrease in survival among all patients with moderate-to-severe TBI. More critically injured patients may benefit from prehospital intubation but may be difficult to identify prospectively. (OR 0.36 p<0.001) Even when adjusting for age invasive prehospital airway management was still associated with increased mortality Non-randomised study from pre-existing database.
Some age adjustment done grossly but not powered for children
No information for functional outcomes
Prehospital endotracheal intubation for severe head injury in children: a reappraisal. Cooper et al. 2001 USA Children <18yrs with severe head injury
578 patients
Retrospective database study Mortality Mortality was virtually identical between ETI and BVM at 48% (p <0.5) Non-randomised study from pre-existing database
Functional outcome score used only valid for children >7yrs (183 patients)
Injury complications Injury complications occurred less often in ETI at 58% vs. 71% for BVM
Functional outcome No difference in functional outcomes using Functional Independent Measures (FIM) scores in those >7yrs
Effect of Out-of-hospital pediatric endotracheal intubation on survival and neurological outcome. A controlled clinical trial. Gausche, M et al. 2000 USA Children <12yrs requiring airway intervention
830 patients
Controlled trial with treatment allocation by alternate day Mortality No significant difference in survival overall between BVM and ETI group (OR 0.82; 95% CI, 0.61-1.11) For head injury survival was 32% BVM vs 25% ETI (OR 0.71 95% CI 0.23-2.19) Clinical controlled trial
Few cases for head injury as the main injury
Functional outcome based on modified pediatric cerebral performance category scale
Neurological outcome No significant difference overall in good neurological outcome (OR 0.87; 95% CI, 0.62-1.22) For head injury alone good neurological outcome in 8% BVM vs. 11% ETI (OR 1.44; 95% CI, 0.24-8.52)
Intubation and survival in severe paediatric blunt head injury Suominen et al. 2000 Finland Children <18yrs with severe blunt head injury
176 patients
Retrospective data analysis Mortality Survival was better for children intubated in the field compared to non-trauma centre EDs (p=0.05) Overall higher mortality for children who underwent in field or non-trauma centre intubation Non-randomised study from pre-existing database.
Only 176 children identified for the study
No functional outcome data
Author Commentary:
There are quite a lot of studies focusing on the effect of prehospital airway management but only a few focus specifically on the paediatric age group. Of these studies, the clear majority are retrospective analysis of registry data with one clinical trial which contained only a small number of children with head injury as the primary injury. Most of the studies found an association with increased mortality in patients intubated in the pre-hospital environment even with stratification for severity of injury. The reasons could be multifactorial including varying paramedic experience in different countries, insufficient pre-oxygenation, hyperoxia or increased transit times.

The retrospective studies share the same disadvantages including reliance on accurate record keeping by the prehospital clinicians which is subject to recall bias. Additionally, some studies used unadjusted data so the results are more likely to be confounded by other factors and less comparable between the studies. Intubation is often the first or last resort for airway management and many studies did not differentiate between those where intubation was used first line and those who resorted to intubation after failed LMA or I-Gel management when considering outcome data.

Few studies had long term neurological outcome data and used a variety of rating scales with one scale was only validated for children aged 7 and over.
Bottom Line:
Pre-hospital endotracheal intubation in children with head injury is associated with increased mortality but more controlled trials and studies including outcomes need to be completed to ascertain the long-term consequences.
References:
  1. Heschl, Stefan et al. . Efficacy of pre-hospital rapid sequence intubation in paediatric traumatic brain injury: A 9-year observational study.
  2. Sokol, K et al.. Prehospital interventions in severely injured pediatric patients: Rethinking the ABCs.
  3. Davis, Adrienne et al. . The BIG score and prediction of mortality in Pediatric blunt trauma.
  4. DiRusso, S et al. . Intubation of Pediatric trauma patients in the field: predictor of negative outcome despite risk stratification.
  5. Davis, D et al. . The Impact of Prehospital endotracheal intubation on outcome in moderate to severe traumatic brain injury.
  6. Cooper et al. . Prehospital endotracheal intubation for severe head injury in children: a reappraisal.
  7. Gausche, M et al. . Effect of Out-of-hospital pediatric endotracheal intubation on survival and neurological outcome. A controlled clinical trial.
  8. Suominen et al. . Intubation and survival in severe paediatric blunt head injury