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Clinical Progress Note: Point-of-Care Ultrasound for the Pediatric Hospitalist

Journal of Hospital Medicine 15(3). 2020 March;:170-172. Published Online First November 20, 2019 | 10.12788/jhm.3325
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© 2020 Society of Hospital Medicine

 

LUMBAR PUNCTURE

LP is commonly performed by pediatric hospitalists, although success can be influenced by numerous factors, including provider and staff expertise, patient anatomy, and body habitus. Requiring multiple attempts can increase patient discomfort and parental anxiety. Failure to obtain cerebrospinal fluid can delay diagnosis or leave providers in uncertain clinical situations that may commit patients to prolonged antibiotic courses. POCUS can be used to identify anatomic markers such as interspinous processes, anatomic midline, and depth of the ligamentum flavum.12 It can also be used to identify epidural hematomas after failed LPs to avoid additional unsuccessful attempts.13 POCUS guidance for LP has been described using both static (preprocedural marking) and dynamic (scanning during the procedure) techniques, although most of the studies use the static approach. The Society for Hospital Medicine POCUS Task Force has recently released a position statement recommending that POCUS should be used for site selection before performing LP in adult patients when providers are adequately trained.12 Although this position statement was for adult patients, recent evidence suggests that there is also benefit in Pediatrics.

Two recent meta-analyses have investigated POCUS use for pediatric LPs.14,15 Olowoyeye et al. included four studies with a total of 277 patients and found that POCUS use was associated with a reduction in traumatic taps (risk ratio [RR] = 0.53, 95% C: 0.13-0.82) when compared with landmark approaches.14 However, there was no statistically significant reduction in LP failure, number of needle insertion attempts, or procedure length. A more recent meta-analysis performed a pediatric subgroup analysis of six studies including 452 patients and found a statistically significant reduction in traumatic taps (13.7% vs 31.8%, risk difference = −21.3%, 95% C: −38.2% to −4.3%) and number of needle insertion attempts (1.53 vs 2.07, mean difference = −0.47, 95% C: −0.73 to −0.21).15 The primary outcome of LP success trended toward favoring POCUS, but it was not statistically significant (88.4% vs 74.0%, OR = 2.55, 95% C: 0.99-6.52). We believe that recent evidence suggests that there is benefit in using POCUS when hospitalists attempt pediatric LPs, particularly when physical landmarks are difficult to identify or after failed attempts. However, adequate training with simulation and supervised practice should be undertaken before integrating this into clinical practice.

CONCLUSION

Evidence accumulated in the past five years has built on previous work suggesting that POCUS has a role in the diagnosis of pneumonia and skin abscess and in the performance of LPs. However, gaps in the literature remain when applying POCUS in PHM. Only a few studies to date were conducted in non-CC inpatient settings, and although several pediatric hospitalists work in EDs or care for critically ill children, our largest population comprises general pediatric ward patients. Studies have also used ultrasonographers with variable POCUS training and clinical experience, which makes comparing or combining studies challenging since POCUS is dependent on provider skills. Studies involving PHM providers and inpatient populations are needed. Additional studies evaluating the process and outcome measures are also needed to understand whether the theoretical advantages are consistently realized in real-world PHM practice. Finally, PHM-specific curricula should be designed in collaboration with various PHM stakeholders and with specialties who already have robust POCUS training pathways. There is opportunity within PHM for multi institutional research collaboration, identification of best practices, and development of PHM-specific training for fellowship and faculty development programs.