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Grand RoundsWeekly Evidence Brief

Pediatrics

Edition

30-Second Takeaway

  • Automated insulin delivery in preschoolers is associated with better glycemic control than MDI.
  • Music therapy reduces depressive symptoms in children and adolescents in randomized trials.

Week ending June 27, 2026

Grand Rounds: Selected pediatric practice updates

Pediatric IBD lags adult evidence for advanced therapies

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASESJun 23, 2026

Children with IBD often face more aggressive disease but have fewer pediatric-specific RCTs for advanced therapies than adults. Only infliximab, adalimumab, and ustekinumab have pediatric approvals; most other agents remain used off-label. Safety data beyond anti-TNFs are sparse, with limited pediatric evidence for serious infections, malignancy, or VTE. Authors recommend integrating real-world evidence and pediatric precision-medicine approaches to fill evidence gaps.

Digital bedside guideline platform linked to shorter LOS after pediatric allogeneic HCT

TRANSPLANTATION AND CELLULAR THERAPYJun 20, 2026

Sustained use of a digital clinical decision-support platform correlated with a 14% shorter adjusted inpatient LOS versus pre-platform (ratio 0.858; p=0.018). Adjusted mean LOS fell from 53.3 to 45.7 days during sustained use. Non-relapse mortality trended lower in sustained-use cohorts after adjustment, but small at-risk numbers make estimates cautious. No increase in ICU admissions or 30-day readmissions was observed.

Music therapy reduces depressive symptoms in youth

CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY AND MENTAL HEALTHJun 24, 2026

Meta-analysis of 9 RCTs (n=690) found music therapy reduced depressive symptoms (SMD -0.55). Music therapy also improved self-esteem (SMD 0.45) and quality of life (SMD 0.69), with limited data for anxiety. Exploratory analyses suggested larger effects in younger children and with longer, more frequent sessions, but these are hypothesis-generating.

References

Numbered in order of appearance. Click any reference to view details.

Additional Reads

Optional additional studies from this edition.

Edition context

Clinical signal

  • Use AID where feasible but monitor device access and equity.
  • Consider music therapy as an adjunct; therapy type, dose, and age may modify benefit.
  • Be cautious extrapolating adult IBD data to children; seek pediatric-specific evidence.