Finder M, Boylan GB, Twomey D, Ahearne C, Murray DM,
Hallberg B. Two-Year Neurodevelopmental Outcomes After Mild Hypoxic Ischemic
Encephalopathy in the Era of Therapeutic Hypothermia. JAMA Pediatr. 2019 Nov 11. doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.4011. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
IMPORTANCE:
Therapeutic hypothermia reduces risk of death and disability
in infants with moderate to severe hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE).
Randomized clinical trials of therapeutic hypothermia to date have not included
infants with mild HIE because of a perceived good prognosis.
OBJECTIVE:
To test the hypothesis that children with mild HIE have
worse neurodevelopmental outcomes than their healthy peers.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS:
Analysis of pooled data from 4 prospective cohort studies in
Cork, Ireland, and Stockholm, Sweden, between January 2007 and August 2015. The
dates of data analysis were September 2017 to June 2019. Follow-up was
performed at age 18 to 42 months. In this multicenter cohort study, all
children were born or treated at the tertiary centers of Cork University
Maternity Hospital, Cork, Ireland, or Karolinska University Hospital,
Stockholm, Sweden. In all, 690 children were eligible for this study.
EXPOSURES:
At discharge, all children were categorized into the
following 5 groups using a modified Sarnat score: healthy controls, perinatal
asphyxia (PA) without HIE, mild HIE, moderate HIE, and severe HIE.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES:
Cognitive, language, and motor development were assessed
with the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, Third Edition
(BSITD-III). The BSITD-III scores are standardized to a mean (SD) of 100 (15),
with lower scores indicating risk of developmental delay.
RESULTS:
Of the 690 children eligible for this study, 2-year
follow-up data were available in 471 (mean [SD] age at follow-up, 25.6 [5.7]
months; 54.8% male), including 152 controls, 185 children with PA without HIE,
and 134 children with HIE, of whom 14 had died. Infants with mild HIE (n = 55)
had lower cognitive composite scores compared with controls, with a mean (SD)
of 97.6 (11.9) vs 103.6 (14.6); the crude mean difference was -6.0 (95% CI,
-9.9 to -2.1), and the adjusted mean difference was -5.2 (95% CI, -9.1 to
-1.3). There was no significant difference in the mean cognitive composite
scores between untreated children (n = 47) with mild HIE and surviving children
with moderate HIE (n = 53) treated with therapeutic hypothermia, with a crude
mean difference for mild vs moderate of -2.2 (95% CI, -8.1 to 3.7).
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE:
This study's findings suggest that, at age 2 years, the
cognitive composite scores of children with a history of mild HIE may be lower
than those of a contemporaneous control group and may not be significantly
different from those of survivors of moderate HIE treated with therapeutic
hypothermia.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/journal-summaries/hypoxic-ischemic-encephalopathy-perinatal-asphyxia-children/2020/01/08/7597892?spec=neurology
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