Top Papers You May Have Missed in April 2022 – Consultant360

Posted: May 24, 2022 at 1:47 am

AUTHOR:Scott T. Vergano, MDDepartment of Pediatrics, Childrens Hospital of The Kings Daughters, Norfolk, VA

CITATION:Vergano ST. Top papers you may have missed in April 2022. Consultant360. Published online May 18, 2022.

A policy statement this month is so important that I have chosen to focus most of my commentary on it. In addition, I note several other relevant publications that appeared in the month of April.

Please feel free to share with your colleagues, discuss in your offices, and write toeditors@consultant360.comwith your thoughts and opinions. As always, I am interested in hearing your thoughts and responses.

Here are my selections:

Health Supervision for Children and Adolescents With Down Syndrome1 The most important publication this month is this update to the 2011 Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) guidance on Health Supervision for Children With Down Syndrome. I read and reference this policy statement every time I do a check-up for a patient with Trisomy 21 and often give it out to families as well. (In my old paper charts, it was stapled to the inside of the front of the chart.) Here are the most significant changes that I notice compared with the previous statement:

The AAP Council on Genetics has issued equally valuable guidelines on health supervision for numerous other genetic conditions, in addition to Trisomy 21. The disorders covered by current policy statements include achondroplasia, Williams syndrome, neurofibromatosis type 1, and Marfan syndrome.

Childhood Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Adult Cardiovascular Events2

The authors of this multinational prospective study follow 38,589 participants over a mean of 35 years and record 319 fatal and 779 fatal or non-fatal cardiovascular events in adulthood. They identify 5 childhood cardiovascular risk factors: body mass index, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol level, triglyceride level, and youth smoking, and examine whether these risk factors are predictive of fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events in adults. After calculating a z-score for individual and combined risk factors, they conclude that risk factors identified in childhood are positively associated with mid-life cardiovascular events. The strongest association is noted with youth smoking and the weakest with total cholesterol level.

Crossing LinesA Change in the Leading Cause of Death among U.S. Children3This editorial from theNew England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) notes that the leading cause of death in children in the United States from ages 1 to 24 years has changed since 2017; it is now firearm-related injuries and no longer motor vehicle collisions (MVCs). The change is related to both a decrease in MVCs and an increase in firearm-related deaths, particularly homicides and suicides in older patients within the cohort. Two comments posted on the NEJM website criticize choosing an unconventional definition of children to make the statistics justify the conclusion.

Annual STI Testing Among Sexually Active Adolescents4

The addition of a question about sexually transmitted infection (STI) screening on the biennial national Youth Risk Behavior Survey administered in schools enabled the authors of this publication inPediatricsto assess the frequency of STI screening among adolescents who acknowledge having sex within the last 3 months. They find that 26.1% of sexually active female students and 13.7% of male students report having been tested for STIs in the previous year. They conclude that adherence with guidelines for STI screening among adolescents appears suboptimal. Current national guidelines recommend annual screening for gonorrhea and chlamydia in sexually active adolescent females and males who have sex with males, but not in all adolescent males.

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Top Papers You May Have Missed in April 2022 - Consultant360

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