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Survival of extremely premature babies in a geographically defined population: prospective cohort study of 1994-9 compared with 2000-5

Survival of extremely premature babies in a geographically defined population: prospective cohort study of 1994-9 compared with 2000-5
Survival of extremely premature babies in a geographically defined population: prospective cohort study of 1994-9 compared with 2000-5

Objective: to assess changes in survival for infants born before 26 completed weeks of gestation. 

Design: prospective cohort study in a geographically defined population. 

Setting: former Trent health region of the United Kingdom. 

Subjects: All infants born at 22+0 to 25+6 weeks' gestation to mothers living in the region. Terminations were excluded but all other births of babies alive at the onset of labour or the delivery process were included. 

Main outcome measures: outcome for all infants was categorised as stillbirth, death without admission to neonatal intensive care, death before discharge from neonatal intensive care, and survival to discharge home in two time periods: 1994-9 and 2000-5 inclusive. 

Results: the proportion of infants dying in delivery rooms was similar in the two periods, but a significant improvement was seen in the number of infants surviving to discharge (P<0.001). Of 497 infants admitted to neonatal intensive care in 2000-5, 236 (47%) survived to discharge compared with 174/490 (36%) in 1994. These changes were attributable to substantial improvements in the survival of infants born at 24 and 25 weeks. During the 12 years of the study none of the 150 infants born at 22 weeks' gestation survived. Of the infants born at 23 weeks who were admitted to intensive care, there was no significant improvement in survival to discharge in 2000-5 (12/65 (18%) in 2000-5 v 15/81 (19%) in 1994-9). 

Conclusions: survival of infants born at 24 and 25 weeks of gestation has significantly increased. Although over half the cohort of infants born at 23 weeks was admitted to neonatal intensive care, there was no improvement in survival at this gestation. Care for infants born at 22 weeks remained unsuccessful.

0959-8146
Field, David J.
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Dorling, Jon S.
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Manktelow, Bradley N.
004657a2-54f8-4bbf-97da-62bf471a3411
Draper, Elizabeth S.
9c1d3580-fa21-4268-a182-6ffc62d0520a
Field, David J.
92b4196a-0df1-4130-8ed7-3c6e08b9dcb6
Dorling, Jon S.
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Manktelow, Bradley N.
004657a2-54f8-4bbf-97da-62bf471a3411
Draper, Elizabeth S.
9c1d3580-fa21-4268-a182-6ffc62d0520a

Field, David J., Dorling, Jon S., Manktelow, Bradley N. and Draper, Elizabeth S. (2008) Survival of extremely premature babies in a geographically defined population: prospective cohort study of 1994-9 compared with 2000-5. BMJ, 336 (7655), [1221]. (doi:10.1136/bmj.39555.670718.BE).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to assess changes in survival for infants born before 26 completed weeks of gestation. 

Design: prospective cohort study in a geographically defined population. 

Setting: former Trent health region of the United Kingdom. 

Subjects: All infants born at 22+0 to 25+6 weeks' gestation to mothers living in the region. Terminations were excluded but all other births of babies alive at the onset of labour or the delivery process were included. 

Main outcome measures: outcome for all infants was categorised as stillbirth, death without admission to neonatal intensive care, death before discharge from neonatal intensive care, and survival to discharge home in two time periods: 1994-9 and 2000-5 inclusive. 

Results: the proportion of infants dying in delivery rooms was similar in the two periods, but a significant improvement was seen in the number of infants surviving to discharge (P<0.001). Of 497 infants admitted to neonatal intensive care in 2000-5, 236 (47%) survived to discharge compared with 174/490 (36%) in 1994. These changes were attributable to substantial improvements in the survival of infants born at 24 and 25 weeks. During the 12 years of the study none of the 150 infants born at 22 weeks' gestation survived. Of the infants born at 23 weeks who were admitted to intensive care, there was no significant improvement in survival to discharge in 2000-5 (12/65 (18%) in 2000-5 v 15/81 (19%) in 1994-9). 

Conclusions: survival of infants born at 24 and 25 weeks of gestation has significantly increased. Although over half the cohort of infants born at 23 weeks was admitted to neonatal intensive care, there was no improvement in survival at this gestation. Care for infants born at 22 weeks remained unsuccessful.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 April 2008
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 May 2008

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485040
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485040
ISSN: 0959-8146
PURE UUID: c3feef9e-d8af-4769-8c0b-dd42c969f17f
ORCID for Jon S. Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 28 Nov 2023 17:53
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 02:20

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Contributors

Author: David J. Field
Author: Jon S. Dorling ORCID iD
Author: Bradley N. Manktelow
Author: Elizabeth S. Draper

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