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Randomised trial of cord clamping and initial stabilisation at very preterm birth

Authors :
Lelia, Duley
Jon, Dorling
Angela, Pushpa-Rajah
Sam J, Oddie
Charles William, Yoxall
Bernard, Schoonakker
Lucy, Bradshaw
Eleanor J, Mitchell
Joe Anthony, Fawke
Gill, Kirkwood
Source :
Archives of Disease in Childhood. Fetal and Neonatal Edition
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
BMJ, 2017.

Abstract

ObjectivesFor very preterm births, to compare alternative policies for umbilical cord clamping and immediate neonatal care.DesignParallel group randomised (1:1) trial, using sealed opaque numbered envelopes.SettingEight UK tertiary maternity units.Participants261 women expected to have a live birth before 32 weeks, and their 276 babies.InterventionsCord clamping after at least 2 min and immediate neonatal care with cord intact, or clamping within 20 s and immediate neonatal care after clamping.Main outcome measuresIntraventricular haemorrhage (IVH), death before discharge.Results132 women (137 babies) were allocated clamping ≥2 min and neonatal care cord intact, and 129 (139) clamping ≤20 s and neonatal care after clamping; six mother-infant dyads were excluded (2, 4) as birth was after 35+6 weeks, one withdrew (death data only available) (0, 1). Median gestation was 28.9 weeks for those allocated clamping ≥2 min, and 29.2 for those allocated clamping ≤20 s. Median time to clamping was 120 and 11 s, respectively. 7 of 135 infants (5.2%) allocated clamping ≥2 min died and 15 of 135 (11.1%) allocated clamping ≤20 s; risk difference (RD) −5.9% (95% CI −12.4% to 0.6%). Of live births, 43 of 134 (32%) had IVH vs 47 of 132 (36%), respectively; RD −3.5% (−14.9% to 7.8%). There were no clear differences in other outcomes for infants or mothers.ConclusionsThis is promising evidence that clamping after at least 2 min and immediate neonatal care with cord intact at very preterm birth may improve outcome; a large trial is urgently needed.Trial registrationISRCTN 21456601.

Details

ISSN :
14682052 and 13592998
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....754610d18d76c3dfaa27fe207b3567a3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2016-312567