Small Bowel Obstruction Publications
Implementation of a Contrast Challenge Algorithm for Adhesive Small Bowel Obstructions in Children: A Prospective, Multi-Institutional Study - PubMed
Speck KE, Shah NR, Van Arendonk K, Rubalcava NS, Hirschl RB, Goldstein SD, Leys C, Markel TA, Rymeski B, Wright T, Matusko N, Ayala SA, Bergus KC, Carter SR, Collings A, Downard CD, Flynn-O'Brien KT, Georgeades C, Lal DR, Halaweish IF, Joshi D, Mak G, Mannava SV, Saylors SA, Trinidad S, Yeh A, Zeineddin S, Minneci PC. Implementation of a Contrast Challenge Algorithm for Adhesive Small Bowel Obstructions in Children: A Prospective, Multi-Institutional Study. Ann Surg. 2025 Jun 9. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000006775. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 40485473.
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Abstract
Objective: Evaluate if hyperosmolar water-soluble contrast challenges (CC) can improve clinical outcomes and reduce hospital length-of-stay (LOS) in children with adhesive small bowel obstruction (ASBO).
Background: Despite documented efficacy of CC algorithms in adults with ASBO, ongoing variability exists in management of children.
Methods: This is a multi-institutional prospective, pre/post-algorithm implementation study of a contrast challenge algorithm in children (≤18 y) admitted with ASBO (10/2021-09/2023). Primary analysis compared patients managed in the pre-implementation phase to those in the post-implementation phase. Secondary analysis compared all patients undergoing CC to those who did not. Primary outcome was LOS. Secondary outcomes included proportion of patients receiving CC, CC-associated complications, and proportion of patients undergoing surgery. Sensitivity, specificity, negative (NPV) and positive (PPV) predictive values of CC were calculated.
Results: 264 patients were treated for ASBO (pre-implementation phase: n=77, adoption phase: n=80, post-implementation phase: n=107). CC use increased from 53% to 86% (pre-to-post-implementation; P<0.001). The proportion of patients undergoing surgery (35.1 vs 37.4%, P=0.747) and LOS remained similar (5.1 vs 5.6 d, P=0.802). Across all three phases, 189 patients received a CC with zero contrast-related complications. Compared to patients who did not receive CC (n=75), those receiving CC had a similar proportion undergoing surgery (42.7 vs. 33%, P=0.154) with similar LOS (5.0 vs 6.3 d, P=0.137) but significantly lower rates of readmission (2.6 vs 10.7%, P<0.001). Diagnostic performance of the CC included a sensitivity 100%, specificity 81%, NPV 100%, PPV 91%.
Conclusion: Contrast challenges in children are safe with excellent diagnostic performance to guide clinical decision-making.
Cite
Speck KE, Shah NR, Van Arendonk K, Rubalcava NS, Hirschl RB, Goldstein SD, Leys C, Markel TA, Rymeski B, Wright T, Matusko N, Ayala SA, Bergus KC, Carter SR, Collings A, Downard CD, Flynn-O'Brien KT, Georgeades C, Lal DR, Halaweish IF, Joshi D, Mak G, Mannava SV, Saylors SA, Trinidad S, Yeh A, Zeineddin S, Minneci PC. Implementation of a Contrast Challenge Algorithm for Adhesive Small Bowel Obstructions in Children: A Prospective, Multi-Institutional Study. Ann Surg. 2025 Jun 9. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000006775. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 40485473.