Acute Paediatric Mastoiditis in the UK Before and During the COVID-19
Pandemic: A National Observational Study
Abstract
Objectives To explore the impact of COVID-19 on the management and
outcomes of acute paediatric mastoiditis across the UK. Design National
retrospective and prospective audit Setting 48 UK secondary care ENT
departments Participants Consecutive children aged 18 years or under,
referred to ENT with a clinical diagnosis of mastoiditis. Main outcome
measures Cases were divided into: Period 1 (01/11/19-15/03/20) before
the UK population were instructed to reduce social contact, and Period 2
(16/03/20-30/04/21), following this. Periods 1&2 were compared for
population variables, management and outcomes. Secondary analyses
compared outcomes by primary treatment (medical/needle
aspiration/surgical). Results 286 cases met criteria (median 4 per site,
range 0-24). 9.4 cases were recorded per week in period 1 versus 2.0 in
period 2, with no winter increase in cases in Dec 2020-Feb 2021. Patient
age differed between period 1&2 (3.2 Vs 4.7 years respectively,
p<0.001). 85% of children in period 2 were tested for
COVID-19 with a single positive test. In period 2 cases associated with
P. aeruginosa significantly increased. 48.6% of children were scanned
in period 1 vs 41.1% in period 2. Surgical management was used more
frequently in period 1 (43.0% Vs 24.3%, p=0.001). Treatment success
was high, with failure of initial management in 6.3%, and 30-day
re-admission for recurrence in 2.1%. The adverse event rate (15.7%
overall) did not vary by treatment modality or between periods 1& 2.
Conclusion The COVID-19 pandemic led to a significant change in the
presentation and case-mix of acute paediatric mastoiditis in the UK.