PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Pulmonary hypertension: A growing problem in US children

New study documents rising rate and costs of hospitalization for pediatric pulmonary hypertension

2015-08-12
(Press-News.org) Fast Facts:

Study reveals pediatric pulmonary hypertension hospitalizations on the rise, resulting in skyrocketing costs.

Findings uncover need to initiate a national registry to track individual patients over time and to provide a foundation for clinical trials to test new and better treatments.

Study finds pulmonary hypertension hospitalizations now higher in children without congenital heart disease.

A review of 15 years' worth of data in a national pediatric medical database has documented a substantial increase in the rate of hospitalizations for children with a form of high blood pressure once most common in those with congenital heart disease.

In a report on the data analysis, published in the August issue of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins researchers say hospitalizations nationwide for pulmonary hypertension (PH) overall doubled between 1997 and 2012, with national hospital charges to treat the children rising from the millions to the billions of dollars. In addition, the report showed that a majority of those hospitalized in 2012 did not have congenital heart diseases.

Pulmonary hypertension remains relatively rare overall in children. While the exact incidence and prevalence of pediatric pulmonary hypertension is not well-known, United Kingdom and Netherlands registry data give an incidence for idiopathic pulmonary hypertension (IPAH) of 0.48-0.7 cases per million, respectively. "Though the reason for the trend of increased hospitalization is not entirely clear, it likely reflects several components, including better recognition of PH, broader inclusion of patients with PH and a growing population of patients who survived extreme prematurity, a risk factor for PH," says pediatric cardiologist Melanie K. Nies, M.D., an assistant professor of pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and faculty member at the Johns Hopkins Children's Center.

Pediatricians have long suspected that an increasing number of children were being hospitalized for PH, a condition in which blood pressure is abnormally high in the blood vessels of the lungs, Nies says. Moreover, she says, while the condition was historically associated in children mostly with congenital heart disease, the rising numbers also appeared to reflect a change in the type of patient, with more and more children without congenital heart defects admitted for PH treatment.

In an effort to document the suspicion, Bryan G. Maxwell, M.D., M.P.H., an assistant professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Nies and their colleagues used data from the Kids' Inpatient Database, the largest publicly available database of inpatient pediatric care in the United States. Every three years starting in 1997, the database releases discharge data from thousands of hospitals across the country.

The researchers found that hospitalizations for PH doubled, from one in 1,000 discharges in 1997 to one in 500 in 2012. Further examination showed that inflation-adjusted national charges to treat the condition skyrocketed over this time period, from $926 million in 1997 to $3.12 billion in 2012. Significantly, Nies says, while mortality is still high in this population, it decreased from 11.3 percent of hospitalizations in 1997 to 5.9 percent in 2012.

As researchers had suspected, Nies says, the latest reported data show that patients without congenital heart defects in 2012 accounted for the majority of PH hospitalizations -- at 56.4 percent -- compared to 43.6 percent for patients with congenital heart defects. A surprise from their analysis, she adds, is that only 33.9 percent of hospitalizations for PH were at children's hospitals, even though these specialized centers are often the best equipped to deal with this condition.

"That there's a growing population of pediatric pulmonary hypertension patients is something that we suspected," she says, "but actually having the data to back it up will be important for resource allocation and promoting the best multidisciplinary care for these medically fragile patients."

Nies says there is a need for a national registry to track patient outcomes over time and to provide a foundation for clinical trials to test new treatments.

INFORMATION:

Other Johns Hopkins researchers who participated in this study include Chinwe C. Ajuba-Iwuji, M.D.; John D. Coulson, M.D.; and Lewis H. Romer, M.D.

Related articles:

Johns Hopkins Pediatricians to Study Newborn Bloodstream Infections, Pulmonary Hypertension

Hopkins Children's Cardiologist Hunts Biomarkers of Pulmonary Hypertension END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Brain plasticity after vision loss has an 'on-off switch'

2015-08-12
KU Leuven biologists have discovered a molecular on-off switch that controls how a mouse brain responds to vision loss. When the switch is on, the loss of sight in one eye will be compensated by the other eye, but also by tactile input from the whiskers. When the switch is off, only the other eye will take over. These findings may help improve patient susceptibility to sensory prosthetics such as cochlear implants or bionic eyes. Our brain adjusts to changes of all kind. This brain plasticity is useful for neural development and learning, but also comes into play when ...

Fireflies predict network loyalty

2015-08-12
Online social networking generates vast quantities of data that might be useful to the service providers, advertising agencies, and even the users themselves. Writing in the International Journal of Communication Networks and Distributed Systems this month, researchers in India describe an approach to establishing new connections in a network using what they refer to as a "firefly swarm approach" Ebin Deni Raj and Dhinesh Babu of the School of Information Technology and Engineering, VIT University, in Tamil Nadu, explain that the emergence of social computing, especially ...

Researchers reveal mystery of how contractions in labour grow stronger

2015-08-12
Scientists, for the first time, have identified a mechanism in the muscle cells of the uterus that could point to how contractions in childbirth grow stronger. It is understood that the hormone oxytocin plays a significant role in stimulating contractions during labour, which helps to move a baby down the birth canal. It is not known, however, how these contractions increase and sustain their strength during hours of labour. A team at Liverpool investigated how uterine contractions grow stronger when the human body's 'biological rules' dictates that contractions ...

Statistical model predicts with high accuracy play-calling tendency of NFL teams

2015-08-12
SEATTLE, WA, AUGUST 12, 2015 - If a defensive coordinator of a National Football League (NFL) team could predict with high accuracy whether their team's opponent will call a pass or run play during a game, he would become a rock star in the league and soon be a head coach candidate. William Burton, an industrial engineering student who is minoring in statistics at North Carolina State University (NCSU), and collaborator Michael Dickey, a statistics major who graduated from NCSU in May, have built a statistical model that predicts the play-calling tendency of NFL teams ...

Statisticians using social media to track foodborne illness and improve disaster response

2015-08-12
SEATTLE, WA, AUGUST 12, 2015 - The growing popularity and use of social media around the world is presenting new opportunities for statisticians to glean insightful information from the infinite stream of posts, tweets and other online communications that will help improve public safety. Two such examples--one that enhances systems to track foodborne illness outbreaks and another designed to improve disaster-response activities--were presented this week at the 2015 Joint Statistical Meetings (JSM 2015) in Seattle. Tracking Foodborne Illness Outbreaks: In a presentation ...

Value-added models focus of JSM 2015 panel discussion

2015-08-12
SEATTLE, WA, AUGUST 12, 2015 - Panelists talked about various aspects of value-added models, commonly referred to as VAMs, while the discussant posed a new question about the use of evaluation models during a panel discussion on the hot-button topic today at the 2015 Joint Statistical Meetings (JSM 2015) in Seattle. The panel discussion, titled "Value-Added Models: A Primer and Discussion," featured four experts in the areas of statistics, education research and VAMs. They are: Jennifer E. Broatch, assistant professor of statistics at Arizona State University Jennifer ...

Target healthy cells to stop brain cancer 'hijack': UBC study

Target healthy cells to stop brain cancer hijack: UBC study
2015-08-12
New UBC research into brain cancer suggests treatments should target the cells around a tumor to stop it from spreading. UBC research team Christian Naus, Wun Chey Sin and John Bechberger study glioma, the most aggressive form of adult brain cancer. Glioma has a low five-year survival rate of 30 per cent because it is difficult to completely remove cancer cells without compromising brain functions and chemotherapy and radiotherapy do not prevent the regrowth of remaining cancer cells. With this new research, the team reveals an alternative route to rein in the glioma ...

Molecular discovery paves way for new diabetic heart disease treatments

2015-08-12
Researchers at New Zealand's University of Otago have discovered why heart disease is the number-one killer of people with diabetes, a breakthrough finding opening the way for new treatments to combat the disease in diabetic patients by targeting a key protein called Beclin-1. Diabetes affects more than 365 million people worldwide with rates expected to double by 2030. Recent studies show that at least 60% of people with the disease die because of cardiovascular complications. Why diabetes takes such a toll on heart health has long remained a mystery. Now, in a new ...

Powering off TB: New electron transport gene is a potential drug target

Powering off TB: New electron transport gene is a potential drug target
2015-08-12
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently approved the first new drug to fight tuberculosis (TB) in more than 40 years, but treatment still takes six months, 200 pills and leaves 40 percent of patients uncured. Thus, new targets are needed. Today in ACS Central Science, researchers report they have identified one such target -- a gene that allows the disease to camp out in human immune cells, and is thus essential for the organism's proliferation. TB kills about 1.3 million people around the world every year. The microorganism that causes the disease, Mycobacterium ...

Retrieving eggs earlier during IVF may improve success rates for older women

2015-08-12
IVF success rates for women aged 43 and above could improve by retrieving eggs from their ovaries at an earlier stage of fertility treatment, according to a new study published today in the Journal of Endocrinology. US-based researchers found that the function of cells which nurse and support the development of eggs declines rapidly after 43, causing the egg to be bombarded by hormones that are normally only released after ovulation. Retrieving eggs from smaller follicles at an earlier stage in the IVF process was found to minimise this risk, resulting in a higher quality ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New Durham University study reveals mystery of decaying exoplanet orbits

The threat of polio paralysis may have disappeared, but enterovirus paralysis is just as dangerous and surveillance and testing systems are desperately needed

Study shows ChatGPT failed when challenging ESCMID guideline for treating brain abscesses

Study finds resistance to critically important antibiotics in uncooked meat sold for human and animal consumption

Global cervical cancer vaccine roll-out shows it to be very effective in reducing cervical cancer and other HPV-related disease, but huge variations between countries in coverage

Negativity about vaccines surged on Twitter after COVID-19 jabs become available

Global measles cases almost double in a year

Lower dose of mpox vaccine is safe and generates six-week antibody response equivalent to standard regimen

Personalised “cocktails” of antibiotics, probiotics and prebiotics hold great promise in treating a common form of irritable bowel syndrome, pilot study finds

Experts developing immune-enhancing therapies to target tuberculosis

Making transfusion-transmitted malaria in Europe a thing of the past

Experts developing way to harness Nobel Prize winning CRISPR technology to deal with antimicrobial resistance (AMR)

CRISPR is promising to tackle antimicrobial resistance, but remember bacteria can fight back

Ancient Maya blessed their ballcourts

Curran named Fellow of SAE, ASME

Computer scientists unveil novel attacks on cybersecurity

Florida International University graduate student selected for inaugural IDEA2 public policy fellowship

Gene linked to epilepsy, autism decoded in new study

OHSU study finds big jump in addiction treatment at community health clinics

Location, location, location

Getting dynamic information from static snapshots

Food insecurity is significant among inhabitants of the region affected by the Belo Monte dam in Brazil

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons launches new valve surgery risk calculators

Component of keto diet plus immunotherapy may reduce prostate cancer

New circuit boards can be repeatedly recycled

Blood test finds knee osteoarthritis up to eight years before it appears on x-rays

April research news from the Ecological Society of America

Antimicrobial resistance crisis: “Antibiotics are not magic bullets”

Florida dolphin found with highly pathogenic avian flu: Report

Barcodes expand range of high-resolution sensor

[Press-News.org] Pulmonary hypertension: A growing problem in US children
New study documents rising rate and costs of hospitalization for pediatric pulmonary hypertension