Title: International Neonatal Immunotherapy Study (INIS)
1International Neonatal Immunotherapy Study (INIS)
2Why is the INIS follow up study so important?
- William Tarnow-Mordi
- Westmead Hospital and Childrens Hospital at
Westmead - NHMRC Clinical Trials Centre
- University of Sydney
3because INIS will
- exemplify disability-free survival as a primary
outcome measure in neonatal trials. - test common preconceptions on the importance of
various pathogens and clinical presentations in
neonatal sepsis. - Provide evidence on potential immuno-modulatory
effects of IVIG - be the first large-scale use of a Parent Report
of cognitive performance at 2 years, validated
against the BSID II MDI. - aim for as high as possible follow up to maximise
validity.
4(No Transcript)
5William Silverman (Fumer) 1917-2004
-
- Taught his students and friends
- to consider the long term consequences of
neonatal care, for patients and families - to cultivate a habit of lifelong (un) learning
- semper plangere (always complain) - and look
for better evidence -
-
61
- Disability-free survival as a primary outcome
measure
7(No Transcript)
8IVIG for suspected infection in neonates Ohlsson
Lacy, Cochrane Library 2005
controls No IVIG treated IVIG Odds ratio
MORTALITY 24 38/ 161 15 23/ 157 0.63 (0.42 1.00)
DISABILITY ? ? ?
9History of oxygen use in preterm neonates
- early 1950s unrestricted, high O2, subsequent
huge increase in RLF (severe ROP)
From Wright K. Textbook of Ophthalmology 1997.
Eds. Williams Wilkins. Chapter 22
10(No Transcript)
11Cost of preventing Retrolental Fibroplasia?Cross
K. Lancet 1973
- Each baby whose sight was saved by limiting
oxygen may have cost - 16 hypoxic deaths and
- many survivors with spastic diplegia
- A large RCT should have evaluated not just ROP
but mortality and long term morbidity
12Early postnatal (lt96 hr) corticosteroids for
preventing chronic lung disease in preterm
infants. Cochrane Review Halliday, Ehrenkrantz,
Doyle.
- 7 RCTs with 991 infants
- 69 increase in relative risk of cerebral palsy
1.69 (1.2 2.38) - Re-illustrates risk of introducing an effective
therapy (known to reduce chronic lung disease)
without knowing its impact on disability-free
survival
132
- Relative importance of specific pathogens and
presentations
14- Two personal (un) learning points
15(No Transcript)
16(a) IVIG is not indicated in
- coagulase negative staphylococcus (CONS) sepsis
- because it has no impact on long term morbidity
17(b) IVIG is not indicated in
- Culture-negative clinical infection (clinical
sepsis treated with antibiotics for 5 days or
more, with no pathogen identified) - because it is not associated with adverse long
term outcome
18Association between cerebral palsy and
coagulase-negative staphylococci.Mittendorf et
al. Lancet 1999
- Cultured the space between the membranes after
aseptic separation of amnion from chorion in 107
preterm infants in MagNET trial - 35 grew no organisms. 28 grew CONS
- CONS isolated in 4/5 (80) infants who later
manifest CP vs 26/102 (25) who did not. (plt0.02) - Remained significant after adjusting for
birthweight, seizures, neonatal ventilation and
presentation.
19Mittendorf et al. Lancet 1999
- First report of a specific perinatal bacterium in
association with CP. - Generates the hypotheses that
- CONS may play a causal role in CP
- mediated by virulence factors such as
haemolysins, deoxyribonuclease, slime and adhesins
20Cerebral Palsy after neonatal sepsis Murphy et
al, BMJ 1997
- Population-based case control study in 293 3-5
year olds born before 32 weeks gestation - After adjusting for gestation, antenatal and
intrapartum risk factors, odds ratio for CP after
neonatal sepsis was 3.6 (2.5 9.3) - CONS was the single most common cause of neonatal
sepsis in this cohort (25-50 of all pathogens)
David Isaacs, unpublished data
21(No Transcript)
22Stoll et al JAMA 2004
- Neurodevelopmental and growth impairment among
ELBW infants with neonatal infection - 6093 infants lt 1000 g bwt assessed at 18 22
months corrected for gestation
23Neuro-developmental Impairment (NDI) in infected
versus uninfected infants
Category N () NDI (unadjusted) OR for NDI adjusted for 21 risk factors
uninfected 2161 (35) 29 -
Culture neg clinical infection 1538 (25) 43 1.3 (1.1-1.6)
Culture positive sepsis 1922 (32) 48 1.5 (1.2 1.7)
Sepsis and NEC 279 (5) 53 1.8 (1.4 2.5)
meningitis 193 (3) 48 1.6 (1.1 2.3)
24Neuro-developmental impairment in infants with
different pathogens versus uninfected infants
Category N NDI (unadjusted) Adjusted OR for NDI relative to uninfected
uninfected 1976 29 -
CONS 853 44 1.3 (1.1 1.6)
Other Gm pos 256 48 1.7 (1.2 2.3)
Gram negative 185 45 1.8 (1.2 7.6)
Fungal 96 57 1.4 (0.9 2.2)
25After adjustment for antenatal, perinatal and
postnatal factors
- Neonatal infection was associated with OFC lt 10th
centile at 36 weeks - Neonatal infection, including CONS and
culture-negative sepis, was associated with
increased neuro-developmental impairment and poor
head growth at 18-22 months
26The Stoll cohort study raises important questions
- Is neonatal infection a cause of long term
neuro-developmental impairment? - Is Coagulase negative staphylococcus the most
common infective cause of NDI? - Can anti-inflammatory therapies, like IVIG,
reduce, increase or leave disability unchanged
after neonatal infection?
27Limitations of an observational study in
birthweight defined cohort
- The uninfected group had more SGA babies (24)
than the other groups (14, 14, 13, 16) (p lt
0.01) - Do SGA babies fare better (less infection, less
NDI) than AGA babies of similar weight, even
after adjustment for gestation? - Could this be a competing explanation for the
association between infection and NDI?
28- Given the totality of evidence linking neonatal
and perinatal sepsis with NDI (including
gestation-based studies), whether neonatal
infection contributes to NDI remains a major,
unanswered question - RCTs like INIS are the only way to resolve the
uncertainty reliably. If IVIG reduces NDI and/
or disability this would be good evidence that
neonatal infection is causative.
293
- Potential immuno-modulatory effects of IVIG
30Pro inflammatory properties of IVIG
- Promoting
- opsonic activity,
- fixation of complement,
- antibody dependent cytotoxicity,
- neutrophil chemiluminescence,
- phagocytosis and
- release of stored neutrophils.
31Anti-inflammatory properties of IVIG
- Down-regulation of inflammatory cytokines via
- Fc receptor blockade,
- provision of anti-idiotype antibodies
- interference with activation of T-cells, B-cells,
the cytokine network and complement - Immunomodulation of autoimmune and inflammatory
diseases with intravenous immune globulin. - Kazatchkine MD,. et al. N Engl J Med 2001
32(No Transcript)
33Immunomodulatory effects of IVIG in cerebral
inflammatory and auto-immune conditions
- Systematic Reviews of RCTs support use of IVIG
in - Chronic Inflammatory De-myelinating
Polyneuropathy (CDIP) - Guillain-Barre syndrome
- Idiopathic Thrombocytopenia
- Kawasaki disease
- Multiple Sclerosis
34- In Kawasaki disease, although we do not fully
understand the mechanism of immune damage
following infection, RCTs have shown that IVIG is
an important anti-inflammatory therapy. It is now
a standard of care. - INIS provides an opportunity to demonstrate
whether IVIG is effective in neonatal sepsis. If
so, it will stimulate more intensive research
into mechanisms.
35(No Transcript)
36- 91 patients within 6 weeks of the first event
suggestive of multiple sclerosis - Randomly assigned to 2 g/ kg IVIG or placebo
- Then 0.4 g/ kg every 6 weeks for a year
37- IVIG more than halved the risk of developing
definite MS within one year - Relative risk 0.36 (0.15 0.88)
- Fewer and smaller cerebral lesions on MRI
38(No Transcript)
39Duggan et al, Lancet 2001
- 36 of babies born before 30 weeks gestation had
MRI cerebral lesions on scans done at a median 2
days after birth - The risk of cerebral lesions increased after
- raised maternal CRP
- preterm rupture of membranes
- Could postnatal IVIG benefit pre-existing
cerebral inflammation (as in adult MS)?
40(No Transcript)
41Primary Research Question
Does intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) reduce
the primary outcome of mortality or major
disability at two years corrected for gestation
in babies receiving antimicrobial therapy for a
suspected or proven serious infection?
includes anti-virals or anti-fungals as
appropriate
42- Selected subgroup analyses
43Clinical severity at presentation from data
recorded at trial entry
- High severity
- Looks seriously ill or inactive AND has low or
high temperature, or prolonged capillary return,
or is ventilated, or FiO2/ SpO2 consistent with
high mortality risk - Moderate severity
- None of the above, but WCC lt 5 x 109/L, or CRP
gt15 mg/L, or platelets lt 50 x 109/L, or pathogens
in blood or sterile site, or pneumonia, or CSF
suggests bacterial meningitis - Low severity
- None of the above
44Maternal chorioamnionitis
- infants born at lt 30 weeks gestation to women
with clinical chorioamnionitis vs infants born at
lt 30 weeks gestation with no clinical
chorioamnionitis vs infants born at 30 weeks.
45Elevated maternal CRP
- infants born at lt 30 weeks gestation to women
with elevated CRP (gt 80mg/l) vs infants born at lt
30 weeks gestation with no elevated maternal CRP
vs infants born at gt 30 weeks
46Preterm birth and duration of membrane rupture
- Born at lt 37 weeks and membranes ruptured for lt
24 hours, 24-48 hours or gt 48 hours vs born
at gt 37 weeks.
47Early onset infection
- (non contaminant organisms isolated from culture
sent before 48 hours) - a) group B streptococcal disease
- b) other pathogens
- c) indeterminate aetiology
48Late onset infection
- (non contaminant organisms isolated from culture
sent after 48 hours) - a) gram positive organisms except
Staphylococcus epidermidis - b) staphylococcus epidermidis
- c) other pathogens
- d) clinical sepsis with no organism grown
49- Parent Report of cognitive performance at 2 years
50(No Transcript)
51Validation of a parent report measure of
cognitive development in very preterm infants
Johnson et al. Dev Med Child Neurol 2004
- 64 two year olds who were lt 30 weeks gestation in
UK follow up centres - Assessed with the Mental Development Index of the
Bayley II Scales and the modified Parent Report
questionnaire - Parent report score lt 49 predicted MDI lt 70 with
81 sensitivity and 81 specifity
52- Parent report will be used to assess cognitive
outcome at 2 years corrected in all patients - Alongside paediatrician assessment of general
health and neurological status - Bayley II scales will be performed in 600 ANZ
infants, to validate Parent Report in ANZ
535
- INIS aims for a follow up rate
- as high as possible
54Take home messages
- In the light of current evidence, collaborators
are encouraged to recruit eligible infants still
being treated with antibiotics for suspected or
proven clinical sepsis and - CONS
- Clinical chorioamnionitis (if still on
antibiotics) - Elevated maternal CRP (if still on antibiotics)
- Culture-negative clinical sepsis/ pneumonia if
antibiotics are planned, or have been given, for
5 or more days - NB its prudent not to recruit infants who will
be impossible to follow up at 2 years