| Literature DB >> 32634818 |
Saraswati Kache1, Mohammod Jobayer Chisti2, Felicity Gumbo3, Ezekiel Mupere4, Xia Zhi5, Karthi Nallasamy6, Satoshi Nakagawa7, Jan Hau Lee8, Matteo Di Nardo9, Pedro de la Oliva10, Chhavi Katyal11, Kanwaljeet J S Anand12, Daniela Carla de Souza13, Vanessa Soares Lanziotti14, Joseph Carcillo15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fewer children than adults have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the clinical manifestations are distinct from those of adults. Some children particularly those with acute or chronic co-morbidities are likely to develop critical illness. Recently, a multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) has been described in children with some of these patients requiring care in the pediatric ICU.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32634818 PMCID: PMC7577838 DOI: 10.1038/s41390-020-1053-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.756
Recommendations for the management of children infected with COVID-19.
| Recommendation | Strength |
|---|---|
| Ventilation | |
| 1. In children with COVID-19 infection and hypoxemia, begin supplemental oxygen therapy by low-flow nasal cannula when oxygen saturations (SpO2) are <90%. If the patient continues with hypoxemia, oxygen delivery via a face mask with reservoir bag should be initiated. | Strong |
| 2. Children with COVID-19 that remain with increased work of breathing and hypoxemia should be escalated to high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) if available. Patients with progressive respiratory distress or where HFNC is unavailable can be escalated to noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV), bubble continuous positive airway pressure (bCPAP) or bi-level positive airway pressure (BiPAP). | Strong |
| 3. Children with COVID-19 failing NIPPV should be escalated to mechanical ventilation. | Strong |
| 4. In children with COVID-19 requiring intubation, the procedure should be done by a trained and skilled health-care provider. | Strong |
| 5. Children with COVID-19 requiring intubation should be intubated with a cuffed endotracheal tube. | Strong |
| 6. For children with COVID-19 requiring intubation, use of video laryngoscopy should be considered for intubation. | Weak |
| 7. Personal protective equipment (PPE) should be worn for intubation and extubation of all children with COVID-19. | Strong |
| 8. For children with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation, tidal volumes should be limited to 6 ml/kg. | Weak |
| 9. For children with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation, positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) titration should be individualized to each patient and their phase of ARDS. | Weak |
| 10. For children with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation, prone position should be considered in patients with ARDS and severe hypoxemia. | Weak |
| 11. For children with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation with refractory hypoxemia, use of Inhaled nitric oxide is not recommended. | Insufficient evidence |
| 12. For children with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation, high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) is not recommended for routine application but may be considered in select cases. | Insufficient evidence |
| Hemodynamic support | |
| 13. For children with COVID-19 and shock admitted to health systems with PICU availability (ventilatory support and access to vasoactive amines), administer bolus fluids, 10–20 ml/kg per bolus up to 40–60 ml/kg, over the first hour of resuscitation. | Weak |
| 14. For children with COVID-19 and shock admitted to health systems without PICU availability (no ventilatory support and access to vasoactive amines): | |
| a. | Strong |
| b. | Weak |
| 15. In children with COVID-19 and shock, crystalloid solutions should be administered, instead of colloids, for the initial fluid resuscitation. Specifically, we recommend use of balanced solutions over 0.9% saline. | Weak |
| 16. In children with COVID-19 and shock, age-appropriate mean arterial pressure (MAP) should be targeted. In settings where accurate MAPs cannot be easily obtained, systolic blood pressure is an acceptable option. | Strong |
| 17. In children with COVID-19 and shock, consider the use of advanced hemodynamic variables, when available (measurements of cardiac index, systemic vascular resistance, and central venous oxygen saturation); these along with clinical variables at the bedside can guide resuscitation. | Weak |
| 18. In children with COVID-19 and shock, in addition to clinical evaluation, trends in blood lactate levels can help guide resuscitation. | Weak |
| 19. In children with COVID-19 and shock, epinephrine or norepinephrine should be administered, instead of dopamine. Diluted solution can be initiated through a peripheral intravenous catheter if central venous access is not available. | Best practice |
| 20. In children with COVID-19 and shock who need high doses of catecholamines, consider initiating vasopressin. | Best practice |
| 21. In children with COVID-19 and shock, recommendations regarding the use of inodilators cannot be made. But in clinical practice, inodilators such as milrinone, dobutamine or levosimendan could be used when there are signs of tissue hypoperfusion and cardiac dysfunction, despite high doses of catecholamines. | Best practice |
| 22. In children with COVID-19 and refractory shock, consider anti-inflammatory doses of glucocorticoids. | Insufficient evidence |
| 23. In a pediatric patient with COVID-19 and severe disease, a thorough cardiac evaluation should be conducted including an EKG, echocardiography and cardiac biomarker levels (troponin, CK and CK MB). | Strong |
| 24. Glucocorticoid anti-inflammatory therapy and intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) are potential suggested treatments for children with COVID-19-related myocarditis. | Insufficient evidence |
| Adjuvant therapy | |
25. Consider anticoagulation therapy in children with COVID-19 with: a. Mild risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) (i.e. those with indwelling central or peripheral central venous catheters or severely ill with no hyperinflammatory status and with no risk of thrombosis), consider: i. Subcutaneous enoxaparin < 2 months: 0.75 mg/kg/dose q12 h; ≥2 months: 0.5 mg/kg/dose q12 h ii. Anti-Xa factor target: 0.3–0.5 IU/ml b. Children with COVID-19 with high risk of VTE (i.e. critically ill, hyperinflammatory state—C-reactive protein > 150 mg/l, D-dimer > 1500 ng/ml, IL-6 > 100 pg/ml, ferritin > 500 ng/ml, or past history of thromboembolic events) consider: i. Subcutaneous enoxaparin < 2 months: 1.5 mg/kg/dose q12 h; ≥2 months: 1 mg/kg/dose q12 h ii. Anti-Xa factor target: 0.5–1 IU/ml | Weak |
| 26. In critically ill children with COVID-19, thrombocytopenia-associated multiple organ failure (TAMOF: platelet counts of less than 100 × 109/L and two or more failing organs) and acquired ADAMTS-13 deficiency could indicate a thrombotic microangiopathic process. For such patients, therapeutic plasma exchange may be beneficial in controlling the hyperinflammatory and thrombotic state and reversing organ dysfunction. | Weak |
| 27. For critically ill children with COVID-19, we suggest convalescent plasma treatment be offered only within a research framework or on a compassionate basis. | Insufficient evidence |
| 28. For children with COVID-19 admitted to the PICU, initiate enteral nutrition for patients with no contraindications, but parenteral nutrition need not be initiated in the first 7 days of PICU admission. | Weak |
| 29. For children with COVID-19 that develop fluid overload or renal dysfunction and are unresponsive to diuretic therapy consider renal replacement therapy. | Weak |
| CPR/Resuscitation | |
| 30. Limit the number of personnel in the room for pediatric patients with COVID-19 that require cardiopulmonary resuscitation. | Best practice |
| 31. For COVID-19 pediatric patients that have arrested follow standard cardiac arrest guidelines for CPR ratios, and treatments. | Best practice |
32. For intubated patients, recommendations include: a. Increase the FIO2 to 1.0. b. Change mode to Pressure Control Ventilation and limit pressure as needed to generate adequate chest rise. c. Adjusting the trigger to Off will prevent the ventilator from auto-triggering with chest compressions and may prevent hyperventilation. d. Adjust respiratory rate to 10/min for adults and children. e. Adjust PEEP level to balance lung volumes and venous return. f. If return of spontaneous circulation is achieved, set ventilator settings as appropriate to patient’s clinical condition | Best practice |
| 33. Patients in prone position at time of cardiac arrest without an advanced airway should be placed supine. Intubated patients, however, can remain prone and CPR can be initiated while the patient is prone. | Best practice |
| 34. For children with COVID-19 that require PICU admission, address the goals of care with the parents or proxy as life-sustaining therapies are being escalated. | Best practice |
| ECMO considerations | |
| 35. ECMO should be considered in COVID-19-infected pediatric patients to manage ARDS and/or cardiac failure (myocarditis, arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism). | Strong |
| 36. Strict selection criteria for both Veno-Arterial (VA) and Veno-Venous (VV) ECMO should be applied in order to utilize ECMO for those patients most likely to benefit from the procedure. | Strong |
| Pediatric Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome—Children (MIS-C) | |
| 37. Supportive management and advanced monitoring should be provided (see “Hemodynamic support“ section). | |
| 38. Early EKG and echography for cardiac function and coronary flow should be completed. | Best practice |
| 39. Imaging studies should include chest X-ray, abdominal ultrasound, chest CT. | Best practice |
| 40. A multidisciplinary team, including Intensive Care, Cardiology, Infectious Disease and Rheumatology, should manage these patients. | Best practice |
| 41. Laboratory evaluation should include testing for SARS-CoV-2, biomarkers for inflammation, and multiorgan system dysfunction. | Best practice |
| 42. Initiate empirical antibiotics until bacterial sepsis, staphylococcal or streptococcal syndrome are excluded. | Best practice |
| 43. Medications to consider for management of MIS-C include solumedrol, IVIG, anticoagulants (see “Adjuvant therapy” section), and biologics (e.g. Anakinra, IL-6 inhibitors) and should be based on patient’s severity of illness using a multidisciplinary approach. | Insufficient evidence |
| 44. For patients that specifically meet Kawasaki disease criteria (classic or atypical), administer IVIG (2 g/kg) and high-dose aspirin (50 mg/kg). | Strong |
Pharmacologic therapies.
| Pharmacologic therapies under study in adults for COVID-19 | Optimal clinical timing |
|---|---|
| Antiviral | Before day 4 of symptoms |
| Remdesivir | |
| Lopinavir/ritinovir | |
| Immune enhancement | |
| Interferons | Days 4−7 of symptoms |
| Convalescent plasma | In hospital |
| Anti-inflammatory | Days 4–7 of symptoms when ferritin > 500 |
| Corticosteroids (Methylprednisone) | |
| Interleukin 1 Receptor Antagonist Protein | |
| Interleukin 6 inhibitor |