Implementing Higher Phototherapy Thresholds for Jaundice in Healthy Infants 35 Plus Weeks
Chris Cahill, Priya Jegatheesan, Dongli Song, Maria Cortes, Marian Adams, Sudha Rani Narasimhan, Angela Huang, Cathy Angell, Monica Stemmle- Pediatrics
- General Medicine
- Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
OBJECTIVES
To determine the impact of higher bilirubin thresholds on testing and treatment of healthy infants during the neonatal period.
METHODS
This quality improvement study included infants born at ≥35 weeks gestation and admitted to the well-baby nursery between July 2018 and December 2020. We assessed the transition from infants treated according to the 2004 AAP guidelines (pregroup) with those following the Northern California Neonatal Consortium guidelines (postgroup). We examined the proportion of infants receiving phototherapy and total serum bilirubin (TSB) assessments as outcome measures. We examined critical hyperbilirubinemia (TSB above 25 mg/dL or TSB within 2 mg/dL of threshold for exchange transfusion), exchange transfusion, and readmission for jaundice as balancing measures. We compared the differences in outcomes over time using Statistical Process Control p charts. Balancing measures between the pre and postgroups were compared using χ square tests and t-tests.
RESULTS
In our population of 6173 babies, there was a significant shift in the proportion receiving phototherapy from 6.4% to 4%. There were no significant changes in incidences of bilirubin >25 mg/dL (0 of 1472 vs 7 of 4709, P = .37), bilirubin within 2 mg/dL of exchange transfusion thresholds (4 of 1472 vs 5 of 4709, P = .15), exchange transfusion (0 of 1472 vs 1 of 4709, P = .70) or readmission for phototherapy (2.9% versus 2.4%, P = .30), between the 2 groups.
CONCLUSIONS
Higher thresholds for phototherapy treatment of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia can decrease the need for phototherapy without increasing critical hyperbilirubinemia or readmission rate.