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Short, medium, and long deferral of umbilical cord clamping compared with umbilical cord milking and immediate clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and network meta-analysis with individual participant data

Short, medium, and long deferral of umbilical cord clamping compared with umbilical cord milking and immediate clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and network meta-analysis with individual participant data
Short, medium, and long deferral of umbilical cord clamping compared with umbilical cord milking and immediate clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and network meta-analysis with individual participant data

Background: Deferred (also known as delayed) cord clamping can improve survival of infants born preterm (before 37 weeks of gestation), but the optimal duration of deferral remains unclear. We conducted a systematic review and individual participant data network meta-analysis with the aim of comparing the effectiveness of umbilical cord clamping strategies with different timings of clamping or with cord milking for preterm infants. Methods: We searched medical databases and trial registries from inception until Feb 24, 2022 (updated June 6, 2023) for randomised controlled trials comparing cord clamping strategies for preterm infants. Individual participant data were harmonised and assessed for risk of bias and quality. Interventions were grouped into immediate clamping, short deferral (≥15 s to <45 s), medium deferral (≥45 s to <120 s), long deferral (≥120 s), and intact cord milking. The primary outcome was death before hospital discharge. We calculated one-stage, intention-to-treat Bayesian random-effects individual participant data network meta-analysis. This study was registered with PROSPERO, CRD42019136640. Findings: We included individual participant data from 47 trials with 6094 participants. Of all interventions, long deferral reduced death before discharge the most (compared with immediate clamping; odds ratio 0·31 [95% credibility interval] 0·11–0·80; moderate certainty). The risk of bias was low for 10 (33%) of 30 trials, 14 (47%) had some concerns, and 6 (20%) were rated as having a high risk of bias. Heterogeneity was low, with no indication of inconsistency. Interpretation: This study found that long deferral of clamping leads to reduced odds of death before discharge in preterm infants. In infants assessed as requiring immediate resuscitation, this finding might only be generalisable if there are provisions for such care with the cord intact. These results are based on thoroughly cleaned and checked individual participant data and can inform future guidelines and practice. Funding: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.

0140-6736
2223-2234
Seidler, Anna Lene
11f8fe73-3f0f-41d7-abdf-7d569b4df287
Libesman, Sol
6dcb554b-51e4-4b36-8588-c6a072870b88
Hunter, Kylie E.
7cd6adf7-01cf-416f-9b23-fe7253c7ec32
Barba, Angie
f4cf43eb-e167-4dd3-ad3d-fa9ffccfc1e2
Aberoumand, Mason
663f8f20-d681-4d84-8c62-8685414b7982
Williams, Jonathan G.
9ba8f687-3355-41e3-87c6-c3c3b6184c91
Shrestha, Nipun
7fb3cbd4-8c98-4a02-83d4-ed90975e912f
Aagerup, Jannik
0a43403a-ec49-4d40-b6f4-b515c1214880
Sotiropoulos, James X.
df1b2186-7c98-496f-9839-9872927de272
Montgomery, Alan A.
6f6e4e9e-e78b-43b0-9334-05522cfd6cdf
Gyte, Gillian M L
334dab34-f253-4172-bfde-6f30661665fa
Duley, Lelia
db76a61c-94d8-4ec8-82cd-d7baca16f665
Askie, Lisa M.
6f8644af-12ea-4345-954e-2a6174aaa8c2
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
iCOMP Collaborators
Seidler, Anna Lene
11f8fe73-3f0f-41d7-abdf-7d569b4df287
Libesman, Sol
6dcb554b-51e4-4b36-8588-c6a072870b88
Hunter, Kylie E.
7cd6adf7-01cf-416f-9b23-fe7253c7ec32
Barba, Angie
f4cf43eb-e167-4dd3-ad3d-fa9ffccfc1e2
Aberoumand, Mason
663f8f20-d681-4d84-8c62-8685414b7982
Williams, Jonathan G.
9ba8f687-3355-41e3-87c6-c3c3b6184c91
Shrestha, Nipun
7fb3cbd4-8c98-4a02-83d4-ed90975e912f
Aagerup, Jannik
0a43403a-ec49-4d40-b6f4-b515c1214880
Sotiropoulos, James X.
df1b2186-7c98-496f-9839-9872927de272
Montgomery, Alan A.
6f6e4e9e-e78b-43b0-9334-05522cfd6cdf
Gyte, Gillian M L
334dab34-f253-4172-bfde-6f30661665fa
Duley, Lelia
db76a61c-94d8-4ec8-82cd-d7baca16f665
Askie, Lisa M.
6f8644af-12ea-4345-954e-2a6174aaa8c2
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630

Seidler, Anna Lene, Libesman, Sol, Hunter, Kylie E., Barba, Angie, Aberoumand, Mason, Williams, Jonathan G., Shrestha, Nipun, Aagerup, Jannik, Sotiropoulos, James X., Montgomery, Alan A., Gyte, Gillian M L, Duley, Lelia and Askie, Lisa M. , iCOMP Collaborators (2023) Short, medium, and long deferral of umbilical cord clamping compared with umbilical cord milking and immediate clamping at preterm birth: a systematic review and network meta-analysis with individual participant data. The Lancet, 402 (10418), 2223-2234. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(23)02469-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Deferred (also known as delayed) cord clamping can improve survival of infants born preterm (before 37 weeks of gestation), but the optimal duration of deferral remains unclear. We conducted a systematic review and individual participant data network meta-analysis with the aim of comparing the effectiveness of umbilical cord clamping strategies with different timings of clamping or with cord milking for preterm infants. Methods: We searched medical databases and trial registries from inception until Feb 24, 2022 (updated June 6, 2023) for randomised controlled trials comparing cord clamping strategies for preterm infants. Individual participant data were harmonised and assessed for risk of bias and quality. Interventions were grouped into immediate clamping, short deferral (≥15 s to <45 s), medium deferral (≥45 s to <120 s), long deferral (≥120 s), and intact cord milking. The primary outcome was death before hospital discharge. We calculated one-stage, intention-to-treat Bayesian random-effects individual participant data network meta-analysis. This study was registered with PROSPERO, CRD42019136640. Findings: We included individual participant data from 47 trials with 6094 participants. Of all interventions, long deferral reduced death before discharge the most (compared with immediate clamping; odds ratio 0·31 [95% credibility interval] 0·11–0·80; moderate certainty). The risk of bias was low for 10 (33%) of 30 trials, 14 (47%) had some concerns, and 6 (20%) were rated as having a high risk of bias. Heterogeneity was low, with no indication of inconsistency. Interpretation: This study found that long deferral of clamping leads to reduced odds of death before discharge in preterm infants. In infants assessed as requiring immediate resuscitation, this finding might only be generalisable if there are provisions for such care with the cord intact. These results are based on thoroughly cleaned and checked individual participant data and can inform future guidelines and practice. Funding: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 14 November 2023
Published date: 7 December 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493665
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493665
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: 2f2bdb15-f2af-424e-97cc-1e12217fa7cc
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 10 Sep 2024 16:39
Last modified: 11 Sep 2024 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Anna Lene Seidler
Author: Sol Libesman
Author: Kylie E. Hunter
Author: Angie Barba
Author: Mason Aberoumand
Author: Jonathan G. Williams
Author: Nipun Shrestha
Author: Jannik Aagerup
Author: James X. Sotiropoulos
Author: Alan A. Montgomery
Author: Gillian M L Gyte
Author: Lelia Duley
Author: Lisa M. Askie
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Corporate Author: iCOMP Collaborators

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