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Association of umbilical cord blood gas values with mortality and severe neurologic injury in preterm neonates29 weeks' gestation: a national cohort study

Authors :
Prakesh S. Shah
Jon Barrett
Martine Claveau
Zenon Cieslak
Hala Makary
Luis Monterrosa
Rebecca Sherlock
Jie Yang
Sarah D. McDonald
Marc Beltempo
Jaideep Kanungo
Joseph Ting
Ayman Abou Mehrem
Jennifer Toye
Khalid Aziz
Carlos Fajardo
Jaya Bodani
Lannae Strueby
Mary Seshia
Deepak Louis
Ruben Alvaro
Amit Mukerji
Orlando Da Silva
Sajit Augustine
Kyong-Soon Lee
Eugene Ng
Brigitte Lemyre
Thierry Daboval
Faiza Khurshid
Victoria Bizgu
Keith Barrington
Anie Lapoint
Guillaume Ethier
Christine Drolet
Bruno Piedboeuf
Marie St-Hilaire
Valerie Bertelle
Edith Masse
Roderick Canning
Cecil Ojah
Julie Emberley
Jehier Afifi
Andrzej Kajetanowicz
Shoo K. Lee
Wendy Whittle
Michelle Morais
Leanne Dahlgren
Darine El-Chaar
Katherine Theriault
Annie Ouellet
Kimberly Butt
Stephen Wood
Amy Metcalfe
Candace O'Quinn
Christy Pylypjuk
Isabelle Boucoiran
Catherine Taillefer
Joan Crane
Haim Abenhaim
Graeme Smith
Karen Wou
Sue Chandra
Jagdeep Ubhi
George Carson
Michael Helewa
Ariadna Grigoriu
Rob Gratton
Cynthia Chan
James Andrews
Nir Melamed
Jason Burrows
Fatima Taboun
Lara Wesson
Erin MacLellan
Hayley Boss
Vicky Allen
Source :
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology. 227(1)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Umbilical cord arterial and venous blood gas values reflect the acid-base balance status of a newborn at birth. Derangement in these values has been linked to poor neonatal outcomes in term and late preterm neonates; however, the utility of these values in preterm neonates of29 weeks' gestation is unclear.This study aimed to determine the associations of umbilical cord arterial and venous blood gas values with neonatal mortality and severe neurologic injury in extremely preterm neonates and to identify the cutoff values associated with 2.5-fold increases or decreases in the posttest probabilities of outcomes.This was a retrospective cohort study of neonates who were born at 23+0 to 28+6 weeks' gestation between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2019, and who were admitted to neonatal units in Canada.Various cut-offs of umbilical cord blood gas values and lactate values were studied.The main outcomes were mortality before discharge from the neonatal unit and severe neurologic injury defined as grade 3 or 4 periventricular or intraventricular hemorrhage or periventricular leukomalacia. The outcome rates were calculated for various cutoff values of umbilical cord blood gas parameters and were adjusted for birthweight, gestational age, sex, and multiple births. Likelihood ratios were calculated to derive posttest probabilities.A total of 1040 and 1217 neonates had analyzable umbilical cord arterial and venous blood gas values, respectively. In the cohort, the mean (standard deviation) gestational age was 26.5 (1.5) weeks, the mean birthweight was 936 (215) g, the prevalence of mortality was 10% (105/1040), and the prevalence of severe neurologic injury was 9% (92/1016). An umbilical cord arterial pH of ≤7.1 and base excess of ≤-12 mmol/L were associated with2.5-fold higher posttest probability of mortality, and an umbilical cord arterial or venous lactate value of3 was associated with a 2.5-fold lower posttest probability of mortality. An umbilical cord arterial lactate value of3 was associated with a lower posttest probability of severe neurological injury.In preterm neonates of29 weeks' gestation, low umbilical cord arterial pH and high umbilical cord arterial base excess values were associated with a clinically important increase in the posttest probability of mortality, whereas low umbilical cord arterial or venous lactate values were associated with a decrease in the posttest probability of mortality.

Details

ISSN :
10976868
Volume :
227
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....14e7c4ee67072ed2fa9026f8bf723718