4.8 Article

Intensive care for extreme prematurity - Moving beyond gestational age

Journal

NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
Volume 358, Issue 16, Pages 1672-1681

Publisher

MASSACHUSETTS MEDICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa073059

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCATS NIH HHS [UL1 TR000454] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NCRR NIH HHS [M01 RR 00750, M01 RR 00997, M01 RR 06022, UL1 RR024148, M01 RR000044, M01 RR000750, M01 RR 00125, M01 RR000997, M01 RR 08084, M01 RR000039, M01 RR006022, M01 RR000070, M01 RR 00044, UL1 RR24148, M01 RR 00039, M01 RR 00070, M01 RR000125] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NICHD NIH HHS [U10 HD40461, U10 HD034167, U10 HD27856, U10 HD021397, U10 HD21373, U10 HD027904, U10 HD027853, U10 HD040492, U10 HD040689, U10 HD27871, U10 HD40498, U10 HD040461, U10 HD27904, U10 HD27880, U10 HD40521, U10 HD27853, U10 HD027871, U10 HD027851, U10 HD21397, U01 HD36790, U10 HD034216, U10 HD021364, U10 HD34216, U10 HD27851, U10 HD27881, U10 HD21364, U10 HD21385, U10 HD027856, U10 HD040498, U10 HD40689, U01 HD036790, U10 HD021373, U10 HD21415, U10 HD40492, U10 HD021385, U10 HD027880, U10 HD040521] Funding Source: Medline
  4. NINDS NIH HHS [K23 NS048152, K23 NS048152-04, 5K23NS048152-02] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Decisions regarding whether to administer intensive care to extremely premature infants are often based on gestational age alone. However, other factors also affect the prognosis for these patients. Methods: We prospectively studied a cohort of 4446 infants born at 22 to 25 weeks' gestation (determined on the basis of the best obstetrical estimate) in the Neonatal Research Network of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development to relate risk factors assessable at or before birth to the likelihood of survival, survival without profound neurodevelopmental impairment, and survival without neurodevelopmental impairment at a corrected age of 18 to 22 months. Results: Among study infants, 3702 (83%) received intensive care in the form of mechanical ventilation. Among the 4192 study infants (94%) for whom outcomes were determined at 18 to 22 months, 49% died, 61% died or had profound impairment, and 73% died or had impairment. In multivariable analyses of infants who received intensive care, exposure to antenatal corticosteroids, female sex, singleton birth, and higher birth weight (per each 100-g increment) were each associated with reductions in the risk of death and the risk of death or profound or any neurodevelopmental impairment; these reductions were similar to those associated with a 1-week increase in gestational age. At the same estimated likelihood of a favorable outcome, girls were less likely than boys to receive intensive care. The outcomes for infants who underwent ventilation were better predicted with the use of the above factors than with use of gestational age alone. Conclusions: The likelihood of a favorable outcome with intensive care can be better estimated by consideration of four factors in addition to gestational age: sex, exposure or nonexposure to antenatal corticosteroids, whether single or multiple birth, and birth weight. (ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00063063 and NCT00009633.).

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