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Extensive cardiopulmonary resuscitation of preterm neonates at birth and mortality and developmental outcomes

Authors :
Nicole Fischer
Amuchou Soraisham
Prakesh S. Shah
Anne Synnes
Yacov Rabi
Nalini Singhal
Joseph Y. Ting
Dianne Creighton
Deborah Dewey
Marilyn Ballantyne
Abhay Lodha
Prakesh S Shah
Jaideep Kanungo
Joseph Ting
Wendy Yee
Jennifer Toye
Carlos Fajardo
Zarin Kalapesi
Koravangattu Sankaran
Sibasis Daspal
Mary Seshia
Ruben Alvaro
Amit Mukerji
Orlando Da Silva
Chuks Nwaesei
Kyong-Soon Lee
Michael Dunn
Brigitte Lemyre
Kimberly Dow
Ermelinda Pelausa
Anie Lapoint
Christine Drolet
Bruno Piedboeuf
Martine Claveau
Marc Beltempo
Valerie Bertelle
Edith Masse
Roderick Canning
Hala Makary
Cecil Ojah
Luis Monterrosa
Julie Emberley
Jehier Afifi
Andrzej Kajetanowicz
Shoo K Lee
null Canadian Neonatal Follow-Up Network (CNFUN) Investigators
Thevanisha Pillay
Reg Sauvé
Leonora Hendson
Amber Reichert
Jaya Bodani
Diane Moddemann
Thierry Daboval
David Lee
Kevin Coughlin
Linh Ly
Edmond Kelly
Saroj Saigal
Paige Church
Patricia Riley
Thuy Mai Luu
Francine Lefebvre
Charlotte Demers
Sylvie Bélanger
Michael Vincer
Phil Murphy
Source :
Resuscitation. 135
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

To compare mortality and neurodevelopmental outcomes of extremely low gestational age neonates who received delivery room extensive cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DR-CPR) to those who did not require DR-CPR.Preterm neonates born at29 weeks' gestational age between January 2010 and September 2011 and assessed at Canadian Neonatal Follow-Up Network centers were studied. Neonates who received DR-CPR were compared to those who did not require DR-CPR using univariate and multivariable analyses. The primary outcome was a composite of mortality or any neurodevelopmental impairment at 18 to 24 months corrected age defined as the presence of any one or more of the following: cerebral palsy; Bayley-III cognitive, language, or motor composite scores85 on any one of the components; sensorineural/mixed hearing loss or unilateral or bilateral visual impairment. Secondary outcomes were the individual components of the composite outcomes.Of the 2760 neonates born, 173 were excluded and remaining 2587 eligible neonates were included in our study. Of these 2068 had outcome data (80%) of whom 190 (9.2%) received DR-CPR. DR-CPR was independently associated with mortality or neurodevelopmental impairment (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.76; 95% CI 1.21-2.55) and mortality alone (aOR1.94; 95% CI 1.33-2.83). DR-CPR was also associated with increased odds of motor impairment (aOR 2.03; 95% CI 1.28-3.23).In extremely low gestational age neonates, DR-CPR was associated with higher odds of the composite outcome of mortality or neurodevelopmental impairment, mortality alone, and lower motor scores at 18 to 24 months' corrected age.

Details

ISSN :
18731570
Volume :
135
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Resuscitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d2b7a8826233adc6793224791cf2c9d0