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Follow-up at the corrected age of 24 months of preterm newborns receiving continuous infusion of fentanyl for pain control during mechanical ventilation
- Source :
- Pain. 158:840-845
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2017.
-
Abstract
- The neurodevelopmental impact of fentanyl given to preterm newborns for pain control is still unknown. The aim of this study was to assess the neurodevelopmental impact of 2 regimens of fentanyl administration by a prospective follow-up evaluation. In our previous multicenter, double-blind, randomized controlled trial, 131 mechanically ventilated newborns (gestational age ≤32 weeks) were randomized to fentanyl (continuous infusion of fentanyl + open label boluses of fentanyl) or placebo (continuous infusion of placebo + open label boluses of fentanyl). Infant development was evaluated using Griffiths Mental Developmental Scales (Griffiths, 1996) until 24 months of corrected age by trained psychologists who were not aware of the group allocation. 106/131 infants survived at discharge; 3 died after discharge, 25 were lost to follow-up (12 in the fentanyl and 13 in the placebo group). Seventy-eight patients were evaluated at 2 years of corrected age. Children in the fentanyl group, compared with those in the placebo group, obtained significantly lower Griffiths general developmental quotient (mean [SD]: 89.95 [13.64] vs 97.18 [12.72], P = 0.024) together with the scores on the eye-hand coordination (mean [SD]: 89.09 [12.13] vs 99.19 [13.19], P = 0.002) and performance skills (mean [SD]: 79.71 [15.80] vs 90.09 [15.28], P = 0.009) scales. After adjustment for clinical confounders (gestational age, CRIB score, and sex) only eye-hand co-ordination was associated with fentanyl infusion. This study demonstrates that continuous infusion of fentanyl in very preterm infants, given at 1 mcg·kg·h during mechanical ventilation, is associated with a significant decrease in eye and hand co-ordination skills. Longer follow-up is needed to evaluate the impact on future motor, cognitive, and behavioral functions.
- Subjects :
- Male
Developmental Disabilities
medicine.medical_treatment
Longitudinal Studie
Severity of Illness Index
Analgesics
Artificial
Fentanyl
Follow-up studies
Infant
Infant development
Opioids
Patient outcome assessment
Premature
Respiration
Anesthetics, Intravenous
Child Behavior Disorders
Child, Preschool
Cognition Disorders
Double-Blind Method
Female
Humans
Italy
Longitudinal Studies
Pain
Premature Birth
Psychomotor Disorders
Respiration, Artificial
Respiratory Insufficiency
Retrospective Studies
Neurology
Neurology (clinical)
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
law.invention
Psychomotor Disorder
0302 clinical medicine
Randomized controlled trial
Retrospective Studie
law
Anesthetics, Intravenou
Gestational age
Premature birth
Anesthesia
Psychomotor disorder
Human
medicine.drug
Child Behavior Disorder
Developmental Disabilitie
Placebo
Cognition Disorder
03 medical and health sciences
030225 pediatrics
Severity of illness
medicine
Mechanical ventilation
business.industry
medicine.disease
business
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18726623 and 03043959
- Volume :
- 158
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Pain
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a33c85b8743707c03d9b99c285e16e0a
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000839