4.6 Article

Effectiveness of neonatal pulse oximetry screening for detection of critical congenital heart disease in daily clinical routine-results from a prospective multicenter study

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 169, Issue 8, Pages 975-981

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00431-010-1160-4

Keywords

Prenatal ultrasound; Physical examination; Pulse oximetry screening; Newborn; Critical congenital heart disease

Categories

Funding

  1. Klinik fur Kinder-und Jugendmedizin
  2. HELIOS Klinikum Aue GmbH
  3. Klinik f. Kinder-u. Jugendmedizin, Krankenhaus Bautzen, Oberlausitz-Kliniken gGmbH
  4. Frauenklinik, Krankenhaus Dresden-Friedrichstadt, Stadtisches Klinikum
  5. Zentrum fur Kinder-und Jugendmedizin
  6. Stadtisches Krankenhaus Dresden-Neustadt
  7. Geburtshilfe und Pranatalmedizin
  8. Universitatsklinik und Poliklinik fur Kinder und Jugendliche
  9. Abteilung fur Frauen-und Geburtsheilkunde
  10. Krankenhaus Mittweida
  11. Landkreis Mittweida Krankenhaus gGmbH

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Pulse oximetry screening (POS) has been proposed as an effective, noninvasive, inexpensive tool allowing earlier diagnosis of critical congenital heart disease (cCHD). Our aim was to test the hypothesis that POS can reduce the diagnostic gap in cCHD in daily clinical routine in the setting of tertiary, secondary and primary care centres. We conducted a prospective multicenter trial in Saxony, Germany. POS was performed in healthy term and post-term newborns at the age of 24-72 h. If an oxygen saturation (SpO(2)) of a parts per thousand currency sign95% was measured on lower extremities and confirmed after 1 h, complete clinical examination and echocardiography were performed. POS was defined as false-negative when a diagnosis of cCHD was made after POS in the participating hospitals/at our centre. From July 2006-June 2008, 42,240 newborns from 34 institutions have been included. Seventy-two children were excluded due to prenatal diagnosis (n = 54) or clinical signs of cCHD (n = 18) before POS. Seven hundred ninety-five newborns did not receive POS, mainly due to early discharge after birth (n = 727; 91%). In 41,445 newborns, POS was performed. POS was true positive in 14, false positive in 40, true negative in 41,384 and false negative in four children (three had been excluded for violation of study protocol). Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value were 77.78%, 99.90%, 25.93% and 99.99%, respectively. With POS as an adjunct to prenatal diagnosis, physical examination and clinical observation, the percentage of newborns with late diagnosis of cCHD was 4.4%. POS can substantially reduce the postnatal diagnostic gap in cCHD, and false-positive results leading to unnecessary examinations of healthy newborns are rare. POS should be implemented in routine postnatal care.

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