4.4 Article

Effect of preterm chorioamnionitis on lung ultrasound score used to guide surfactant replacement

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PEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGY
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ppul.26576

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inflammation; lung ultrasonography; neonatal ARDS; newborn infant; RDS; respiratory failure

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This study aimed to investigate the influence of clinical chorioamnionitis (CC) on lung ultrasound score (LUS) and ultrasound-guided surfactant treatment. The results showed that CC does not affect LUS in preterm neonates unless it triggers severe neonatal acute respiratory distress syndrome (NARDS). The occurrence of NARDS is the key factor influencing LUS.
ObjectiveLung ultrasound score (LUS) accurately guides surfactant replacement in preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome due to surfactant deficiency. However, surfactant deficiency is not the unique pathobiological feature, as there may be relevant lung inflammation, such as in certain cases of clinical chorioamnionitis (CC). We aim to investigate if CC influences LUS and ultrasound-guided surfactant treatment. DesignRetrospective (2017-2022), large, cohort study targeted to recruit a homogeneous population treated with unchanged respiratory care policy and lung ultrasound protocol. Patients with (CC+: 207) and without (CC-: 205) chorioamnionitis were analyzed with propensity score matching and subsequent additional multivariate adjustments. ResultsLUS was identical at unmatched and matched comparisons. Consistently, at least one surfactant dose was given in 98 (47.3%) and 83 (40.5%) neonates in the CC+ and CC- matched cohorts, respectively (p = .210). Multiple doses were needed in 28 (13.5%) and 21 (10.2%) neonates in the CC+ and CC- cohorts, respectively (p = .373). Postnatal age at surfactant dosing was also similar. LUS was higher in patients who were diagnosed with neonatal acute respiratory distress syndrome (NARDS) (CC+ cohort: 10.3 (2.9), CC- cohort: 11.4 (2.6)), than in those without NARDS (CC+ cohort: 6.1 (3.7), CC- cohort: 6.2 (3.9); p < .001, for both). Surfactant use was more frequent in neonates with, than in those without NARDS (p < .001). Multivariate adjustments confirmed NARDS as the variable with greater effect size on LUS. ConclusionsCC does not influence LUS in preterm neonates, unless inflammation is enough severe to trigger NARDS. The occurrence of NARDS is key factor influencing the LUS.

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