4.3 Article

Antenatal steroid exposure and pulmonary outcomes in adolescents born with very low birth weight

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 10, Pages 806-810

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/jp.2013.69

Keywords

corticosteroids; prematurity; lung function; asthma

Funding

  1. NICHD [PO1 HD047584]

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OBJECTIVE: To compare asthma history and pulmonary function in adolescents born prematurely with very low birth weight with and without antenatal steroid exposure. STUDY DESIGN: We studied 188 fourteen-year olds (94 exposed, 84 male). We used parent report to ascertain asthma and asthma-related symptoms and spirometry to assess pulmonary function. Steroid-exposed and -unexposed groups were compared using Mann-Whitney U-tests (continuous variables), w 2 analysis (categorical variables) and logistic regression (multivariate analyses). RESULT: The steroid-exposed group had greater prevalence of larger airway obstruction (35% vs 21%), and steroid-exposed adolescents with birth weightso1000 g had 4.5-fold higher odds of larger airway obstruction. Wheezing in the past 12 months was two times as prevalent in steroid-exposed adolescents with birth weights between 1000 and 1500 g. CONCLUSION: Antenatal steroid exposure does not provide long-term benefits for pulmonary outcomes in adolescents born prematurely with very low birth weight in the era of surfactant therapy.

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