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OBJECTIVE: This study aims to assess morphological and functional postoperative changes after open or minimally invasive (MIS) repair of esophageal atresia (EA) compared to healthy controls by thoracic real-time MRI. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Musculoskeletal deformities and pulmonary morbidity are common in children after EA repair. The real-time MRI is a novel technique that provides ultrafast, high-quality images during spontaneous breathing, without sedation even in young children. METHODS: Children aged 3-18 years were prospectively examined with a 3 Tesla MRI. Musculoskeletal deformities, static thoracic cross-sectional areas (CSA) at three different levels and lung volumes, as well as dynamic right-to-left ratio of CSA of hemithoraces and lung volumes during forced breathing were evaluated. RESULTS: 72 children (42 open, 8 MIS, 22 controls) were recruited. In the EA group, rib fusions and adhesions (78%, P<0.01) and scoliosis (15%, P=0.32) were found after thoracotomy, but not after MIS. Mean right-to-left ratio of CSA and lung volumes were lower after EA repair compared to controls (P <0.05), indicating impaired thoracic and lung development. The number of thoracotomies was a significant risk factor for smaller thoracic volumes (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: For the first time, morphological changes and thoracic motility after EA repair were visualized by dynamic real-time MRI. Children after EA repair show decreased right-sided thoracic and lung development compared to controls. Open repair leads to significantly more musculoskeletal deformities. This study emphasizes that musculoskeletal morbidity following a thoracotomy in infancy is high.
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Oesophageal atresia (EA) is associated with life-long gastrointestinal and respiratory morbidity and other associated malformations. The aim of this study is to compare physical activity (PA) levels of children and adolescents with and without EA. A validated questionnaire (MoMo-PAQ) was used to evaluate PA in EA patients EA (4-17 years), who were randomly matched for gender and age (1:5) with a representative sample of the Motorik-Modul Longitudinal Study (n = 6233). Sports activity per week (sports index) and minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity per week (MVPA minutes) were calculated. Correlations between PA and medical factors were analysed. In total, 104 patients and 520 controls were included. Children with EA were significantly less active at higher intensities (mean MPVA minutes 462; 95% confidence interval (CI): 370-554) compared to controls (626; 95% CI: 576-676), although there was no statistically significant difference in the sports index (187; 95% CI: 156-220 versus 220; 95% CI: 203-237). A lower mean weight-for-age and height-for-age, additional urogenital (r = - 0.20, p = 0.04) or anorectal malformation (r = - 0.24, p = 0.01) were associated with fewer MVPA minutes. For other medical factors (prematurity, type of repair, congenital heart disease, skeletal malformation or symptom load), no statistically significant association with PA was found. Conclusion: EA patients participated in PA at a similar level but lower intensities compared to the reference cohort. PA in EA patients was largely independent of medical factors. TRIAL REGISTRATION: German Clinical Trials Register (ID: DRKS00025276) on September 6, 2021. WHAT IS KNOWN: ⢠Oesophageal atresia is associated with a low body weight and height, delayed development of motor skills and impaired lung function and exercise capacity. WHAT IS NEW: ⢠Patients with oesophageal atresia have a similar amount of sports activity per week but engage significantly less in moderate to vigorous physical activities compared to peers. ⢠Physical activity was associated with weight-for-age and height-for-age, but largely independent of symptom load and other medical factors.
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Atresia Esofágica , Deportes , Niño , Adolescente , Humanos , Estudios Transversales , Estudios Longitudinales , Ejercicio FísicoRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Esophageal atresia (EA) is a complex malformation. Multidisciplinary management is necessary, with the operative repair being the most challenging step in the treatment algorithm. The complete care structure for children with EA in Germany has not been analyzed yet. METHODS: In the observed period 2016-2022, inpatient EA cases were analyzed 1) during the hospital stay of birth, and 2) during the hospital stay of corrective surgery in patients aged up to 365 days, both based on national hospital discharge data. Patients' comorbidities, hospital caseload, treatment characteristics (e.g. surgical approach) and outcome parameters were analyzed. RESULTS: 1) 1190 newborn EA cases were treated in 260 hospitals during the perinatal period. 54% had at least one additional malformation, and 16% had a birthweight below 1500 g. In-hospital mortality was 8.4%. 2) 1475 corrective operations for EA were performed in 111 hospitals with a consistent median annual caseload of 2 (P25-P95 1-8) per hospital. At least one indicator for a complicated perioperative course was documented in 63.7% of cases. The use of bronchoscopy was coded in 50% of cases. Median ventilation time during the entire hospital stay was 176 h (P25-P95: 95-1759 h). CONCLUSIONS: Newborns with EA are complex and early postoperative complications are common. The care structure is decentralized, and there was no trend towards centralization in the observed period. The low documented use of bronchoscopy is noteworthy. Centralization of the highly complex and schedulable corrective surgery for EA is necessary to evaluate outcomes and might improve the quality of care and resource utilization. CATEGORY OF THE MANUSCRIPT AND TYPE OF STUDY: original article, observational cross-sectional study, secondary data analysis.
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AIM OF THE STUDY: Esophageal atresia (EA) is associated with impaired motor development, cardiopulmonary function, and physical activity (PA). Despite missing scientific evidence, this fact is often attributed to associated congenital heart disease (CHD). The aim of this study was to investigate PA in EA patients without CHD compared with CHD patients and healthy controls. METHODS: In this multicenter study, EA patients aged 6 through 17 years were included. Moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA, minutes per week) was assessed using the standardized and validated questionnaire Motorik-Modul Physical Activity Questionnaire. EA patients were randomly matched 1:4 for gender and age with patients with CHD (n = 1,262) and healthy controls (n = 6,233). Patients born with both EA and CHD were excluded. Means and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) were calculated. To identify associated factors, Spearman's correlation was performed. MAIN RESULTS: Overall, 69 EA patients were matched with 276 CHD patients and 276 controls (57% male, 43% female, mean age 10,3 years, 95% CI: 9.5-11.1). Mean MVPA was reduced in EA (492 minutes, 95% CI: 387-598) and CHD patients (463 minutes, 95% CI: 416-511) compared with controls (613 minutes, 95% CI: 548-679). In subgroup analysis, MVPA was reduced further in females and older age groups with EA and CHD. For EA patients, there was no statistical association between Gross type, current symptoms, surgical approaches, and MVPA. CONCLUSION: Isolated EA and CHD were associated with reduced PA, especially in females and teenagers. To avoid additional morbidity associated with sedentary behavior, PA should be promoted during follow-up.
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The International Network on Esophageal Atresia (INoEA) stands as a beacon of collaboration in addressing the complexities of this congenital condition on a global scale. The eleven board members, from various countries (USA, Canada, France, Australia, Italy, Sweden, Germany, and The Netherlands) and backgrounds (pediatric gastroenterology, pediatric surgery, pediatric pulmonology, nursing, and parents) met in a face-to-face symposium in Lille in November 2023, to identify challenges and solutions for improving global collaboration of the network.