Abstract
BackgroundPartial or complete thymectomy is routinely performed in paediatric open-heart surgeries when treating congenital heart defects. Whether or not thymectomised children require systematic immunological monitoring later in life is unknown. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of preoperatively and postoperatively used antibiotics, hospitalisation and surgical complications on self-reported immunological vulnerability in paediatric patients with early thymectomy to better recognise the patients who could benefit from immunological follow-up in the future.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study, including 98 children and adolescents aged 1–15 years, who had undergone an open-heart surgery and thymectomy in infancy and who had previously answered a survey regarding different immune-mediated symptoms and diagnoses. We performed a comprehensive chart review of preoperative and postoperative factors from 1 year preceding and 1 year following the open-heart surgery and compared the participants who had self-reported symptoms of immunological vulnerability to those who had not.ResultsThe median age at primary open-heart surgery and thymectomy was 19.5 days in the overall study population (60% men, n=56) and thymectomies mainly partial (80%, n=78). Broad-spectrum antibiotics were more frequently used preoperatively in participants with self-reported immunological vulnerability (OR=3.05; 95% CI 1.01 to 9.23). This group also had greater overall use of antibiotics postoperatively (OR=3.21; 95% CI 1.33 to 7.76). These findings were more pronounced in the subgroup of neonatally operated children. There was no statistically significant difference in the duration of intensive care unit stay, hospitalisation time, prevalence of severe infections, surgical complications or glucocorticoid use between the main study groups.ConclusionAntimicrobial agents were more frequently used both preoperatively and postoperatively in thymectomised children with self-reported immunological vulnerability after thymectomy. Substantial use of antimicrobial agents early in life should be considered a potential risk factor for increased immunological vulnerability when evaluating the significance of immune-mediated symptom occurrence in thymectomised paediatric patients.