Changing patterns of infant death over the last 100 years: autopsy experience from a specialist children's hospital

Author:

Pryce JW1,Weber MA2,Ashworth MT2,Roberts SEA1,Malone M2,Sebire NJ1

Affiliation:

1. UCL Institute of Child Health, London, UK

2. Department of Paediatric Pathology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London, UK

Abstract

Objectives Infant mortality has undergone a dramatic reduction in the UK over the past century because of improvements in public health policy and medical advances. Postmortem examinations have been performed at Great Ormond Street Hospital for over 100 years, and analysis of cases across this period has been performed to assess changing patterns of infant deaths undergoing autopsy. Design Autopsy reports from 1909 and 2009 were examined. Age, major pathology and cause of death was reviewed from these cases and entered into an anonymized database. A subsequent comparative analysis was performed. Setting All postmortems performed and reported at Great Ormond Street Hospital in 1909 and 2009. Participants Infant deaths, aged 0–365 days, were identified and subsequently analysed for the two years. Main outcome measures Comparative proportional analysis of postmortem findings from the two time periods. Results Three-hundred and fifty-seven and 347 autopsy reports were identified from 1909 and 2009 including 178 and 128 infant deaths, respectively. The commonest cause of death in 1909 was infection (74%) compared to 20% of deaths in 2009. The most frequent final ‘diagnosis’ in 2009 was ‘unexplained sudden unexpected infant death (SUDI)’, despite a full postmortem including ancillary investigations. In contrast, there were no such cases recorded in 1909, but there were frequent deaths due to gastroenteritis and malnutrition together accounting for 16% of cases, compared to one case of gastroenteritis in 2009. Fifteen percent of 1909 cases had infections which are almost never fatal with appropriate treatment in 2009, including tuberculosis, diphtheria and syphilis. Congenital anomalies were detected with similar frequencies at both time points, (21% and 19% in 1909 and 2009, respectively). Conclusion In the UK, significant changes in patterns of pathology have occurred in paediatric autopsy cases performed at a single specialist centre. Fatal infections and malnutrition (both poverty-related) have reduced yet the incidence of congenital anomalies has remained similar.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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