key: cord-0050012-8qa0pvmr authors: Pelizzo, Gloria; Bagolan, Pietro; Morini, Francesco; Aceti, Mariagrazia; Alberti, Daniele; Andermarcher, Mario; Avolio, Luigi; Bartoli, Fabio; Briganti, Vito; Cacciaguerra, Sebastiano; Camoglio, Francesco S.; Ceccarelli, Pierluca; Cheli, Maurizio; Chiarenza, Fabio; Ciardini, Enrico; Cimador, Marcello; Clemente, Ennio; Cozzi, Denis A.; Dall’ Oglio, Luigi; De Luca, Ugo; Del Rossi, Carmine; Esposito, Ciro; Falchetti, Diego; Federici, Silvana; Gamba, Piergiorgio; Gentilino, Valerio; Mattioli, Girolamo; Martino, Ascanio; Messina, Mario; Noccioli, Bruno; Inserra, Alessandro; Lelli Chiesa, Pierluigi; Leva, Ernesto; Licciardi, Francesco; Midrio, Paola; Nobili, Maria; Papparella, Alfonso; Paradies, Guglielmo; Piazza, Giuseppe; Pini Prato, Alessio; Rossi, Fabio; Riccipetitoni, Giovanna; Romeo, Carmelo; Salerno, Domenico; Settimi, Alessandro; Schleef, Jurgen; Milazzo, Mario; Calcaterra, Valeria; Lima, Mario title: Bedside surgery in the newborn infants: survey of the Italian society of pediatric surgery date: 2020-09-16 journal: Ital J Pediatr DOI: 10.1186/s13052-020-00889-2 sha: 2ae34cfb88e8405f153d847a936e6b56f8f2dae0 doc_id: 50012 cord_uid: 8qa0pvmr INTRODUCTION: This is the report of the first official survey from the Italian Society of Pediatric Surgery (ISPS) to appraise the distribution and organization of bedside surgery in the neonatal intensive care units (NICU) in Italy. METHODS: A questionnaire requesting general data, staff data and workload data of the centers was developed and sent by means of an online cloud-based software instrument to all Italian pediatric surgery Units. RESULTS: The survey was answered by 34 (65%) out of 52 centers. NICU bedside surgery is reported in 81.8% of the pediatric surgery centers. A lower prevalence of bedside surgical practice in the NICU was reported for Southern Italy and the islands than for Northern Italy and Central Italy (Southern 10 per year in 15%. No bedside surgical interventions are performed via thoracic or laparoscopic approach ( Table 2 ). In 89% of centers, preterm neonates with birthweight < 1200 g are the category of babies most likely to undergo NICU bedside surgery (Fig. 1, Table 2 ). In all Institutions, cardiorespiratory instability (100%) and ventilator dependence (63%) are the most-reported criteria in the selection of patients (Table 2) . Pneumothorax drenage (92%), intestinal perforation (89%), pleural effusion drenage (85%), pericardial effusion drenage (85%), central venous catheter (CVC) positioning (81%), patent ductus arteriosus ligation (67%) and congenital diaphragmatic hernia repair (67%) are considered indications to bedside surgery ( Table 2) . Intravenous general anesthesia is the most frequently performed anesthesia (93%) although also inhaled (59%) and locoregional (44%) anesthesia are performed in the NICU setting. Multidisciplinary management of during-surgery and post-surgery pain are widely reported (Table 2) . There were no institutional recommendations on bedside surgical procedures are available in 19/27 (70%) of the centers. In all centers general written consent for surgery was obtained, but in 18/27 (67%) no dedicated informed consent for bedside was available. Of the respondent centers, 94% consider necessary drafting a national NICU bedside surgery guideline. This is the first report, as far as we are aware, of the geographical distribution and workload of Italian pediatric surgical institutions where bedside surgery is performed in the NICU. In Italy, bedside surgery in the NICU is widely practiced and is performed in more than 79% of the respondent centers, although we found some regional differences. Even if the number of procedures were not recorded, indications to bedside surgery were in line with those reported in the literature, and the bedside approach is adopted for several procedures in the NICUs surveyed including open abdominal surgery (necrotizing enterocolitis, intestinal perforation, abdominal wall defect repair/reduction, stoma creation), and thoracic surgery (congenital diaphragmatic hernia, tracheostomy, drainage), central line placement, cardiac surgery (ligation of patent ductus arteriosus) [1, 2, 9, [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] Neonates in need of surgery are traditionally transferred to the main OR, outside the NICU. Most of them are premature with a low birth weight, cardiovascular instability and prolonged ventilator support. The transport of unstable neonates to and from the OR is associated with significant morbidity that may adversely affect outcomes in compromised patients, despite improvements in intrahospital transportation, equipment and experience [1, 3] . Duration of transportation and the severity of the patients' symptoms are also crucial factors affecting complications [4, 5] . Recurrent accidents include hypothermia, change in variations in heart rate and blood pressure, and dislocation of vascular accesses or endotracheal tubes [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] . Bedside surgery in the NICU may avoid accidents during transport, especially for critical and unstable neonates on high-frequency oscillatory ventilation, inhaled nitric oxide therapy, or even ECMO [1, 12, 13] . Surgery in the NICU provides continuity of care by the same intensive care team and guarantees the best care [1] . Therefore, every neonatal ICU planner should create infrastructures for bedside surgery to improve the safety of care [2] . The heterogeneity of the NICU bedside surgery situation in Italy suggested by present survey calls for efforts to regulate the practice in order to obtain the optimal the standard of care in the whole country. In the neonatal patient, surgery requires monitoring of perfusion throughout the operation. In particular, monitoring of brain perfusion is key to improving the survival of these fragile neonates because of the hypoxic ischemic injury risk due to stress and prematurity. For this reason, for bedside NICU surgery to be possible, a dedicated area with infrastructures like central oxygen, suction, compressed air and multiparamonitors is mandatory. In addition, an increased risk of infections following bedside surgery has been reported [9, 14] in case of NICU not provided of a dedicated area for surgery. It is possible that the lack of these facilities found in present survey may represent a major impediment to the spread of bedside surgical procedures in Italy. Our survey indicates that there are few dedicated teams of surgeons and nurses in Italian centers. All invasive procedures involved the pediatric surgeon advice and multidisciplinary management is widely [22] such as bedside neonatal surgery. Where this is available, a team should typically consist of a senior neonatal surgeon, two neonatal surgeons as assistants (one may be a trainee), two trained surgical nurses (one scrub nurse and the other a floor nurse), one technician to maintain the instruments and two neonatal anesthetists. In addition, a neonatologist should attend the surgery to support the anesthetist in continuous monitoring of the patient during surgery and to adjust ventilation parameters as required by the patient's conditions. At the same time, the regular activity of the NICU must not be disrupted by surgery [1] . A NICU dedicated surgical team enables optimal reach and utilization of resources, but solutions for optimizing children's surgical care remain under debate worldwide [23, 24] . So far there are no Italian recommendations for bedside surgery in the NICU, and more than 50% of the centers do not consult specialist literature sources to support the practice of NICU surgical intervention. In general, because the feasibility and safety of NICU bedside surgery are well documented [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] , and the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery [24] on surgical care encourages the introduction of this new therapeutic approach to address the needs of children, no special permission is required. The results of this Survey may be used to optimize the organization of infrastructure, service delivery, training and research, however the development of specific National guidelines may help in the national spread and standardization of NICU bedside surgery. Such guidelines should include an optimal National resources document outlining the personnel, equipment, facilities, procedures, training, research and quality improvement components necessary at all levels of care [24] . Additionally, a surgical safety checklist could be adopted to improve teamwork, communication and adherence to procedural steps and also as a useful learning tool to help junior doctors perform invasive procedures in the NICU [1, 2] . Bedside surgery is performed in the majority of the Italian pediatric surgery centers included in this census. 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Archibald for English revision of the manuscript; OBM Ospedale dei Bambini di Milano-Buzzi Onlus and Fondazione Alberto Mascherpa for their support in our pediatric surgical research. Authors' contributions All the authors have accepted responsibility for the entire content of this submitted manuscript and approved submission. None declared. All data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article.