Title: Outcomes of preterm birth
1Outcomes of preterm birth
- Stefan Johansson
- Department of Neonatology, Karolinska university
hospital - Department of Medical Epidemiology and
Biostatistics, Karolinska institutet - Stockholm, Sweden
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4Studies of outcomes of preterm birth- subjected
to errors!
systematic errors
random errors
What are systematic and random errors?
5Studies of outcomes - random errors
- Measurement errors may be random
- few meaurements - the average value could be
wrong - Outcome differences may be a random finding
- uneven sampling of study subjects may result in
spurious results - Differences in outcomes are not detected
- study sample to small
6BIG IS BEAUTIFUL
7Studies of outcomes - systematic errors
- Selection bias
- Information bias
- Confounding
8Studies of outcomes - selection bias
- The optimal study would be to include the worlds
entire population, but every study have to select
their subjects. - What happens if the selected study subjects are
not similar to the general population? - RISK OF SELECTION BIAS!!
9Studies of outcomes - selection bias
- Cardiovascular risk and running - new insight
- marathon runners.
- Low mortality among preterm infants
- infants in a specialized center
10Studies of outcomes - information bias
- The collection of information is not properly
done misclassification - a preterm infant has several infections but only
one is recorded. - Misclassification can be
- non-differential the error is the same for all
study subjects - differential the error is not the same for
different study groups - Recall bias is a common type of differential
information bias - Cancer patients report more stress than healthy
control, but both groups are similarly stressed
according to objective stress tests.
11Studies of outcomes - confounding
- Confounding meanssomething (measured or
unmeasured) is important for the associations
between you measurements.
Neonatal nurse
Pregnancy
12Studies of outcomes - confounding
- The association is confounded by age of neonatal
nurses.
Neonatal nurse
Pregnancy
13Good design pays off
14Exposures and outcomes of preterm infants
- Parental characteristics
- Hospital setting
- Gestational age
- Apgar scores
- Blood testing
- X-rays
- Lung diseases
- Blood pressure
- Nutrition
- Infections
- Drugs
- Neurological symtoms
- Noise
- Death
- Motor skills
- Vision
- Hearing
- Blood pressure
- Blood glucose
- Allergies
- Cognitive functions
- Academic performace
- Life span
15In addition cohort effects
- Neonatal intensive care is a new speciality.
- 1970s mechanical ventilation
- 1980s new treatment of premature lung
disease maternal steriod treatment for
threatening labour - 1990s high frequency ventilation gentle
nursing strategies treatment of
pain nutrition - Preterms born in the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s do
not represent the same group of people.
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17What do we know from the literature!?
18Preterm birth and mortality - world-wide
- One million infants born preterm die during the
first four weeks (26 of neonatal mortality).
Lawn et al, Lancet 2005365891-900
19Contribution of preterm birth to infant mortality
Infant mortality in live born infants lt 37 weeks,
Canada 1992-1994
Relative risk 95 CI Etiologic fraction
lt 28 weeks 126,7 124,0-129,5 35,7
28-31 weeks 16,2 15,4-17,0 7,3
32-33 weeks 6,6 6,1-7,0 3,2
34-36 weeks 2,9 2,8-3,0 6,3
adjusted for age, parity, race, and education
Reference group infants born at term
Kramer et al, JAMA 2000284843
20Contribution of preterm birth to infant mortality
- 34 of infants deaths attributed to preterm birth
(USA 2002) - Of deaths attributed to preterm birth
- 95 of occured in infants gt 32 weeks and lt1500
grams - two thirds occured during the first 24 hours
Callaghan et al, Pediatrics 20061181566
21Gestational age and mortality - Sweden
Perinatal mortality () in Sweden 2003, by
gestational age.
22Trend in mortality of infants lt 1500 grams
Horbar et al, Pediatrics 2002110143
23Infant mortality related to preeclampsia
Basso et al, JAMA 20062961357
24The impact of level-of-care on mortality
Liveborn infants Mortality Odds ratio 95 CI
Unadjusted university hospital county hospital 924 1320 14.2 10.3 1.00 0.70 0.54 - 0.90
Adjusted university hospital county hospital 924 1320 14.2 10.3 1.00 1.33 0.98 - 1.81
Johansson et al, Pediatrics 20041131230
25The impact of level-of-care on mortality
Liveborn infants Mortality Odds ratio 95 CI
24 - 26 weeks university hospital county hospital 262 125 29.0 43.2 1.00 1.84 1.11 - 3.04
27 - 31 weeks university hospital county hospital 662 1195 8.3 6.9 1.00 1.09 0.74 - 1.61
Johansson et al, Pediatrics 20041131230
26What kind of picture emerges
- Many preterm infants die.
- Mortality risk is inversely associated with
gestation/birth weight. - Preterm birth contribute greatly to infant
mortality rates. - Mortality among the most immature infants has
decreased. - Preeclampsia related mortality has decreased.
- Centralizing care of the most immature infants
may improve survival rates.
27What about outcome in surviving preterm infants?
28Outcome in adults born preterm
- 166 adults BW lt1000 g vs 145 adults with normal
BW,born 1977-1982 in Canada. - Mean gestational age 27 weeks.
- Neurosensory impairment/-s identified in 40
adults (27) - Cerebral palsy n20
- Autism n2
- Blindness n11
- Cognitive impairment n14
Saigal et al, JAMA 2006295667
29Outcome in adults born preterm
- Educational attainments was similar in both
groups(highest achievement excluded those with
neurosensory impairment)
lt1000 g Normal BW p-value
Total years ofcompleted eduaction 13.9 14.5 .02
Highest achievement .06
lt high school 17 12
high school 54 56
college 24 18
university 5 14
30Outcome in adults born preterm
- Current employment(Job classification excluded
those with neurosensory impairment)
lt1000 g Normal BW p-value
Full time work 83 84 .85
Job classification .25
un-/semi-skilled 52 40
skilled, technical 35 41
management professional 13 20
31Outcome in adults born preterm
- Independent living, marital status and parenthood
lt1000 g Normal BW p-value
Independent living 42 53 .19
Marital status .33
single 77 75
married 10 7
cohabitating 13 18
Parenthood 11 14 .36
32Outcome in 6 year old children lt26 weeks
- Infants lt26 weeks, born in the UK in 1995.
- Severe disability defined as
- Cerebral palsy
- IQ less than -3 SD
- Profound hearing loss
- Blindness
- Mild disability defined as
- Neurologic signs, minimalfunctional impairment
- IQ between -1 and -2 SD
- Mild hearing impairment
- Squint or refractive error
Marlow et al, NEJM 20053529
33What kind of picture emerges
- Studies of adults born preterm good outcomes?
- Studies of children born preterm poor outcomes?
- Why contradicting results
- different populations with different different
health care systems? - a reversed healthy worker effect - children
born lt 26w represent a new group of survivors?
34Conclusions
- Outcome of preterm birth consider methods!
- High mortality, although decreasing rates/risks.
- Conflicting results on long term outcome.
- More knowledgeneeded, to predictand promote
goodoutcomes.