IntroductionAir leak is a common complication of necrotizing pneumonia in critically ill children. Severe air leaks impact effective oxygenation and ventilation, oftentimes necessitating multiple thoracostomy tubes and extracorporeal support. Endobronchial valves (EBV) are a minimally invasive intervention to control air leak that may expedite de-escalation of care for critically ill children with necrotizing pneumonia.MethodsA retrospective case series was conducted on patients at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia who were hospitalized in the pediatric intensive care unit, required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), and underwent placement of one or more EBVs for air leak from July 2023 through August 2024.ResultsSix patients, median age 12 years (range 18 months to 18 years), were hospitalized for necrotizing pneumonia complicated by severe air leak and required ECMO. The most common etiology was a viral infection with bacterial co-infection. The median number of EBVs placed per patient was five. The median total time on ECMO was 10 days, with a median duration of 3.5 days after valve placement. The median duration of antibiotic therapy was 47 days (range 24 to 126 days). One patient had a contralateral pneumothorax after valve placement, and another died due to progression of multiorgan failure that began before EBV placement. The five surviving patients were discharged from the hospital, weaned from all respiratory support, and their valves were removed without complication.ConclusionEndobronchial valves are a feasible intervention for severe air leak in critically ill children with necrotizing pneumonia and may expedite liberation from ECMO.
Katz et al. (Mon,) studied this question.