Journal of Pediatric Surgery
Volume 44, Issue 11 , Pages 2139-2144, November 2009

Outcomes of intestinal failure—a comparison between children with short bowel and dysmotile intestine

Section of Pediatric Surgery, Hospital for Children and Adolescents, University of Helsinki, Box 281, FIN-00029 HUS Helsinki, Finland

Received 19 February 2009; received in revised form 6 April 2009; accepted 1 May 2009.

Abstract 

Background

We investigated whether mortality, intestinal adaptation, and liver function differ between intestinal failure (IF) patients with either short bowel (SB) or bowel dysmotility (DM).

Patients and methods

Twenty-six consecutive patients with SB (n = 20) or DM (n = 6) treated between 2000 and 2007 were retrospectively assessed. Intestinal failure was defined as less than 25% of age-adjusted small intestinal length or dependence on parenteral nutrition (PN) more than 6 months.

Results

Median age-adjusted small intestinal length (17% vs 45%) and gestational age (35 vs 40 weeks) were (P < .05) shorter, whereas proportion of the remaining colon (86% vs 0%) was (P < .05) higher in the SB group relative to the DM group. Overall survival was 92%. Median peak serum bilirubin (80 vs 25 μmol/L) and rate of cholestasis (11/20 vs 0/6) were higher (P < .05) in the SB group. Short bowel rather than DM as an etiology of IF predicted weaning off PN (RR, 39.3; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.43-526; P < .01) and development of cholestasis (risk ration [RR], 18.3; 95% CI, 0.658-127; P < .05). Three SB children developed liver failure and two died, whereas neither of these occurred in the DM group.

Conclusions

Children with SB are more likely to wean off PN but more prone to cholestatic liver disease than those with DM as an etiology of IF.

Key words: Dysmotility, Intestinal failure, Outcome, Pediatric, Short bowel syndrome

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PII: S0022-3468(09)00395-9

doi:10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2009.05.002

Journal of Pediatric Surgery
Volume 44, Issue 11 , Pages 2139-2144, November 2009