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Extensive cardiopulmonary resuscitation of preterm...
Journal article

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

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: 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. METHODS: Preterm neonates born at <29 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 scores <85 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. RESULTS: 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). CONCLUSION: 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.

Authors

Fischer N; Soraisham A; Shah PS; Synnes A; Rabi Y; Singhal N; Ting JY; Creighton D; Dewey D; Ballantyne M

Journal

Resuscitation, Vol. 135, , pp. 57–65

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

February 1, 2019

DOI

10.1016/j.resuscitation.2019.01.003

ISSN

0300-9572

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