Pediatric palliative care for metabolic diseases: 20-year epidemiological survey of outpatients at a Brazilian quaternary hospital
Title
Pediatric palliative care for metabolic diseases: 20-year epidemiological survey of outpatients at a Brazilian quaternary hospital
Creator
Spolador GM; Bueno C; Polastrini RTV; Zoboli I; Henrique AC; Freitas E; do Nascimento AG; Pugliese C; Kok F; Barbosa SMDM
Identifier
Publisher
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
Date
2024
Subject
child; Palliative Care; article; cohort analysis; controlled study; female; human; major clinical study; male; retrospective study; palliative therapy; pediatrics; Metabolic Diseases; follow up; long term care; pathophysiology; prevalence; pathology; pediatric patient; outpatient; data analysis software; metabolism; patient monitoring; metabolic disorder/di [Diagnosis]; metabolic disorder/ep [Epidemiology]; disease surveillance; energy deficiency type metabolic disorders; PASW statistics 25.0 software; sphingolipidosis
Description
The interface between pediatric palliative care (PPC) and inborn metabolic diseases (IMD) remains incipient, though these conditions fill the state of art of complex chronic diseases, eligible to this health approach. We analyzed the medical records of PPC clinic during the years 2001 to 2021 and the IMD outpatients. We established a parallel with the world scientific literature concerning the epidemiology of PPC and IMD. Among outpatients, 14% were diagnosed with IMD, which were referred to the PPC service earlier compared to Non-IMD cases. The Group 3 (complex molecules) was the most frequent (64.7%), following by Group 1 representing by small molecules (21.6%), the latter having a lower median age at diagnosis when compared to the former (0.7 vs. 5.2 years, p = 0.001). The sphingolipidoses were the pathologies most frequent in our cohort, in line with what was observed in the literature. There were no differences between IMD groups in terms of diagnosis and PPC referral age, however in Non-IMD conditions, the age of diagnosis were earlier than IMD. Nevertheless, IMD group showed lower age of referral to PPC. The IMD comprises large fraction of outpatients in the PPC setting, thus further studies are needed in this field.
Rights
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Citation List Month
July List 2024
URL Address
Collection
Citation
Spolador GM; Bueno C; Polastrini RTV; Zoboli I; Henrique AC; Freitas E; do Nascimento AG; Pugliese C; Kok F; Barbosa SMDM, “Pediatric palliative care for metabolic diseases: 20-year epidemiological survey of outpatients at a Brazilian quaternary hospital,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed May 22, 2025, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/19673.