4.7 Article

Circulating glucocorticoid bioactivity in the preterm newborn after antenatal betamethasone treatment

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 89, Issue 8, Pages 3999-4003

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/jc.2004-0013

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Antenatal glucocorticoid treatment of mothers at risk of premature delivery is highly cost-effective in reducing neonatal mortality and morbidity. However, there is only limited information on the actual glucocorticoid bioactivity (GBA) reaching the fetus. By employing a recently developed recombinant cell bioassay, we studied circulating GBA in preterm newborns exposed to the standard antenatal betamethasone regimen ( 12 mg betamethasone twice, 24-h interval, for the mother; repeated in 7 - 10 d if required). Plasma GBA and cortisol concentrations were measured in cord blood of 71 infants ( mean gestational age, 28.9 wk; range, 24.6 - 32 wk; mean birth weight, 1208 g; range, 480-2010 g). The median time between the last administered betamethasone dose and birth was 2.0 d. Cord GBA ranged from less than 15.6 to 170 nmol/liter cortisol equivalents. The level was highly dependent on the time between the last betamethasone dose and birth, i.e. infants born shortly (< 12 h) after the last steroid dose displayed on average 4-fold higher GBA than that in the reference group ( infants with > 7 d since the last betamethasone dose before birth or without treatment; 74 vs. 21 nmol/liter cortisol equivalents; P< 0.0001). By contrast, if more than 72 h had elapsed between the last steroid dose and birth, circulating GBA was strongly dependent on cord cortisol ( r = 0.85; P < 0.0001; n = 30). In multiple regression analysis adjusted for cord cortisol concentration and the time since the last steroid dose, increased umbilical artery resistance, a sign of severe fetal distress, was associated with lower cord GBA ( P = 0.01). In conclusion, antenatal exposure of preterm fetuses to betamethasone causes a sizeable, but brief, peak of supraphysiological GBA, and approximately 3 d after the last betamethasone dose, circulating GBA derives from cord cortisol concentration.

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