4.7 Article

Association of Socioeconomic Status and Brain Injury With Neurodevelopmental Outcomes of Very Preterm Children

期刊

JAMA NETWORK OPEN
卷 2, 期 5, 页码 -

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AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.2914

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资金

  1. Spanish Pediatric Society
  2. Spanish Neonatology Society
  3. Canadian Institutes for Health Research [MOP-86489, MOP-79262]
  4. Kids Brain Health Network, a Networks of Centres of Excellence of Canada
  5. University of British Columbia Clinician Investigator program
  6. Canada Research Chair in Population Health Equity
  7. Bloorview Children's Hospital Chair in Paediatric Neuroscience

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IMPORTANCE Studies of socioeconomic status and neurodevelopmental outcome in very preterm neonates have not sensitively accounted for brain injury. OBJECTIVE To determine the association of brain injury and maternal education with motor and cognitive outcomes at age 4.5 years in very preterm neonates. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Prospective cohort study of preterm neonates (24-32 weeks' gestation) recruited August 16, 2006, to September 9, 2013, at British Columbia Women's Hospital in Vancouver, Canada. Analysis of 4.5-year outcome was performed in 2018. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES At age 4.5 years, full-scale IQ assessed using the Wechsler Primary and Preschool Scale of Intelligence, Fourth Edition, and motor outcome by the percentile score on the Movement Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition. RESULTS Of 226 survivors, neurodevelopmental outcome was assessed in 170 (80 [47.1%] female). Based on the best model to assess full-scale IQ accounting for gestational age, standardized beta coefficients demonstrated the effect size of maternal education (standardized beta = 0.21) was similar to that of white matter injury volume (standardized beta = 0.23) and intraventricular hemorrhage (standardized beta = 0.23). The observed and predicted cognitive scores in preterm children born to mothers with postgraduate education did not differ in those with and without brain injury. The best-performing model to assess for motor outcome accounting for gestational age included being small for gestational age, severe intraventricular hemorrhage, white matter injury volume, and chronic lung disease. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE At preschool age, cognitive outcome was comparably associated with maternal education and neonatal brain injury. The association of brain injury with poorer cognition was attenuated in children born to mothers of higher education level, suggesting opportunities to promote optimal outcomes.

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