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Assessment of skin maturity by LED light at birth and its association with lung maturity: vlinical trial decondary outcomes

Assessment of skin maturity by LED light at birth and its association with lung maturity: vlinical trial decondary outcomes
Assessment of skin maturity by LED light at birth and its association with lung maturity: vlinical trial decondary outcomes

Background: vlinicians face barriers when assessing lung maturity at birth due to global inequalities. Still, strategies for testing based solely on gestational age to predict the likelihood of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) do not offer a comprehensive approach to addressing the challenge of uncertain outcomes. We hypothesize that a noninvasive assessment of skin maturity may indicate lung maturity.

Objectives: this study aimed to assess the association between a newborn's skin maturity and RDS occurrence.

Methods: we conducted a case-control nested in a prospective cohort study, a secondary endpoint of a multicenter clinical trial. The study was carried out in 5 Brazilian urban reference centers for highly complex perinatal care. Of 781 newborns from the cohort study, 640 were selected for the case-control analysis. Newborns with RDS formed the case group and newborns without RDS were the controls. All newborns with other diseases exhibiting respiratory manifestations were excluded. Skin maturity was assessed from the newborn's skin over the sole by an optical device that acquired a reflection signal through an LED sensor. The device, previously validated, measured and recorded skin reflectance. Clinical data related to respiratory outcomes were gathered from medical records during the 72-hour follow-up of the newborn, or until discharge or death, whichever occurred first. The main outcome measure was the association between skin reflectance and RDS using univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression. Additionally, we assessed the connection between skin reflectance and factors such as neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) admission and the need for ventilatory support.

Results: out of 604 newborns, 470 (73.4%) were from the RDS group and 170 (26.6%) were from the control group. According to comparisons between the groups, newborns with RDS had a younger gestational age (31.6 vs 39.1 weeks, P<.001) and birth weight (1491 vs 3121 grams, P<.001) than controls. Skin reflectance was associated with RDS (odds ratio [OR] 0.982, 95% CI 0.979-0.985, R 2=0.632, P<.001). This relationship remained significant when adjusted by the cofactors antenatal corticosteroid and birth weight (OR 0.994, 95% CI 0.990-0.998, R 2=0.843, P<.001). Secondary outcomes also showed differences in skin reflectance. The mean difference was 0.219 (95% CI 0.200-0.238) between newborns that required ventilatory support versus those that did not and 0.223 (95% CI 0.205-0.241) between newborns that required NICU admission versus those that did not. Skin reflectance was associated with ventilatory support (OR 0.996, 95% CI 0.992-0.999, R 2=0.814, P=.01) and with NICU admission (OR 0.994, 95% CI 0.990-0.998, R 2=0.867, P=.004).

Conclusions: our findings present a potential marker of lung immaturity at birth using the indirect method of skin assessment. Using the RDS clinical condition and a medical device, this study demonstrated the synchrony between lung and skin maturity.

Trial registration: Registro Brasileiro de Ensaios Clínicos (ReBEC) RBR-3f5bm5; https://tinyurl.com/9fb7zrdb.


2561-3278
Neves, Gabriela Silveira
8f73670f-24e2-4986-bf58-0e0afa8961be
Reis, Zilma Silveira Nogueira
173d08ff-a659-43a1-9d43-6fd9561ecbc9
Romanelli, Roberta
a6562819-e746-42f0-9ea6-d5d7b2411dad
Batchelor, James
e53c36c7-aa7f-4fae-8113-30bfbb9b36ee
Neves, Gabriela Silveira
8f73670f-24e2-4986-bf58-0e0afa8961be
Reis, Zilma Silveira Nogueira
173d08ff-a659-43a1-9d43-6fd9561ecbc9
Romanelli, Roberta
a6562819-e746-42f0-9ea6-d5d7b2411dad
Batchelor, James
e53c36c7-aa7f-4fae-8113-30bfbb9b36ee

Neves, Gabriela Silveira, Reis, Zilma Silveira Nogueira, Romanelli, Roberta and Batchelor, James (2023) Assessment of skin maturity by LED light at birth and its association with lung maturity: vlinical trial decondary outcomes. JMIR biomedical engineering, 8, [e52468]. (doi:10.2196/52468).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: vlinicians face barriers when assessing lung maturity at birth due to global inequalities. Still, strategies for testing based solely on gestational age to predict the likelihood of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) do not offer a comprehensive approach to addressing the challenge of uncertain outcomes. We hypothesize that a noninvasive assessment of skin maturity may indicate lung maturity.

Objectives: this study aimed to assess the association between a newborn's skin maturity and RDS occurrence.

Methods: we conducted a case-control nested in a prospective cohort study, a secondary endpoint of a multicenter clinical trial. The study was carried out in 5 Brazilian urban reference centers for highly complex perinatal care. Of 781 newborns from the cohort study, 640 were selected for the case-control analysis. Newborns with RDS formed the case group and newborns without RDS were the controls. All newborns with other diseases exhibiting respiratory manifestations were excluded. Skin maturity was assessed from the newborn's skin over the sole by an optical device that acquired a reflection signal through an LED sensor. The device, previously validated, measured and recorded skin reflectance. Clinical data related to respiratory outcomes were gathered from medical records during the 72-hour follow-up of the newborn, or until discharge or death, whichever occurred first. The main outcome measure was the association between skin reflectance and RDS using univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression. Additionally, we assessed the connection between skin reflectance and factors such as neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) admission and the need for ventilatory support.

Results: out of 604 newborns, 470 (73.4%) were from the RDS group and 170 (26.6%) were from the control group. According to comparisons between the groups, newborns with RDS had a younger gestational age (31.6 vs 39.1 weeks, P<.001) and birth weight (1491 vs 3121 grams, P<.001) than controls. Skin reflectance was associated with RDS (odds ratio [OR] 0.982, 95% CI 0.979-0.985, R 2=0.632, P<.001). This relationship remained significant when adjusted by the cofactors antenatal corticosteroid and birth weight (OR 0.994, 95% CI 0.990-0.998, R 2=0.843, P<.001). Secondary outcomes also showed differences in skin reflectance. The mean difference was 0.219 (95% CI 0.200-0.238) between newborns that required ventilatory support versus those that did not and 0.223 (95% CI 0.205-0.241) between newborns that required NICU admission versus those that did not. Skin reflectance was associated with ventilatory support (OR 0.996, 95% CI 0.992-0.999, R 2=0.814, P=.01) and with NICU admission (OR 0.994, 95% CI 0.990-0.998, R 2=0.867, P=.004).

Conclusions: our findings present a potential marker of lung immaturity at birth using the indirect method of skin assessment. Using the RDS clinical condition and a medical device, this study demonstrated the synchrony between lung and skin maturity.

Trial registration: Registro Brasileiro de Ensaios Clínicos (ReBEC) RBR-3f5bm5; https://tinyurl.com/9fb7zrdb.


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Accepted/In Press date: 27 October 2023
Published date: 25 December 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491373
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491373
ISSN: 2561-3278
PURE UUID: d7c290b1-ac90-4d62-87e8-f04fdf2d2ee9
ORCID for James Batchelor: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5307-552X

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Date deposited: 21 Jun 2024 16:31
Last modified: 22 Jun 2024 01:35

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Contributors

Author: Gabriela Silveira Neves
Author: Zilma Silveira Nogueira Reis
Author: Roberta Romanelli
Author: James Batchelor ORCID iD

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