4.6 Article

Variations in Mortality and Morbidity by Gestational Age among Infants Born at Term

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 154, Issue 3, Pages 358-362

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2008.09.013

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Funding Source: Medline

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Objective To examine the risks of infant death and neonatal morbidity by week of gestation at term. Study design National U.S. birth cohort study on the basis of singleton live births in 1995-2001 at 37 to 41 completed weeks gestational age (GA), with exclusion of congenital anomalies. Main outcomes included neonatal, postneonatal, and cause-specific infant death; low-Apgar score at 5 minutes; receipt of neonatal mechanical ventilation >= 30 minutes; neonatal seizures; birth it jury; and meconium aspiration syndrome. To reduce confounding by indication, we carried out a secondary analysis restricted to low-risk deliveries. Results In non-Hispanic,white women, the mortality rate decreased with increasing GA from 37 to 39 weeks, remained stable from 39 to 40 weeks, and then (for neonatal death) increased at 41 weeks. Rates of low 5-minute Apgar score and mechanical ventilation showed a U-shaped relation across term GAs, and rates of meconium aspiration syndrome and birth injury rose with increasing GA. Results were similar among infants born to,low-risk mothers and in non-Hispanic black women. Conclusions Term infants show considerable heterogeneity across gestational age in neonatal and late infant outcomes, even when born to mothers at low risk. Recent trends toward earlier labor induction may have adverse health impacts. (J Pediatr 2009;154:358-62)

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