
Joseph W. Rossano
VerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 2006–2024
Research topics
- Emergency medicine
- Internal medicine
- Medicine
- Pediatrics
- Cardiology
- Intensive care medicine
Selected publications
Cost-effectiveness of bivalirudin in pediatric ventricular assist devices
The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation · 2022 · 16 citations
- Medicine
- Emergency medicine
- Internal medicine
Predicting and Surviving Prolonged Critical Illness After Congenital Heart Surgery
Critical Care Medicine · 2020 · 23 citations
- Medicine
- Emergency medicine
- Intensive care medicine
OBJECTIVES: Prolonged critical illness after congenital heart surgery disproportionately harms patients and the healthcare system, yet much remains unknown. We aimed to define prolonged critical illness, delineate between nonmodifiable and potentially preventable predictors of prolonged critical illness and prolonged critical illness mortality, and understand the interhospital variation in prolonged critical illness. DESIGN: Observational analysis. SETTING: Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium clinical registry. PATIENTS: All patients, stratified into neonates (≤28 d) and nonneonates (29 d to 18 yr), admitted to the pediatric cardiac ICU after congenital heart surgery at Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium hospitals. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: There were 2,419 neonates and 10,687 nonneonates from 22 hospitals. The prolonged critical illness cutoff (90th percentile length of stay) was greater than or equal to 35 and greater than or equal to 10 days for neonates and nonneonates, respectively. Cardiac ICU prolonged critical illness mortality was 24% in neonates and 8% in nonneonates (vs 5% and 0.4%, respectively, in nonprolonged critical illness patients). Multivariable logistic regression identified 10 neonatal and 19 nonneonatal prolonged critical illness predictors within strata and eight predictors of mortality. Only mechanical ventilation days and acute renal failure requiring renal replacement therapy predicted prolonged critical illness and prolonged critical illness mortality in both strata. Approximately 40% of the prolonged critical illness predictors were nonmodifiable (preoperative/patient and operative factors), whereas only one of eight prolonged critical illness mortality predictors was nonmodifiable. The remainders were potentially preventable (postoperative critical care delivery variables and complications). Case-mix-adjusted prolonged critical illness rates were compared across hospitals; six hospitals each had lower- and higher-than-expected prolonged critical illness frequency. CONCLUSIONS: Although many prolonged critical illness predictors are nonmodifiable, we identified several predictors to target for improvement. Furthermore, we observed that complications and prolonged critical care therapy drive prolonged critical illness mortality. Wide variation of prolonged critical illness frequency suggests that identifying practices at hospitals with lower-than-expected prolonged critical illness could lead to broader quality improvement initiatives.
Recent grants
Training in Molecular Therapeutics for Pediatric Cardiology
NIH · $12.5M · 1999–2029
Frequent coauthors
- 270 shared
Kimberly Y. Lin
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 240 shared
Jeffrey A. Towbin
Le Bonheur Children's Hospital
- 176 shared
Matthew J. O’Connor
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 152 shared
Robert E. Shaddy
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles
- 150 shared
John L. Jefferies
University of Tennessee Health Science Center
- 129 shared
Seema Mital
Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research
- 127 shared
Kristin M. Burns
National Institutes of Health
- 127 shared
Jonathan B. Edelson
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Joseph W. Rossano
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup