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Risk Factors in Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (Newborn Lung Project)

2019年7月12日 更新者:University of Wisconsin, Madison
To investigate risk factors in bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and to elucidate the relationship between BPD, acute lung disease severity, respiration-related variables, water balance, nutrition, familial predisposition, and environmental, pregnancy, and delivery parameters.

調査の概要

詳細な説明

BACKGROUND:

Despite many improvements in neonatal intensive care during the decade from 1977 to 1987, infant respiratory distress syndrome remained a major public health problem. Increasing survival among premature infants led to the emergence of BPD as the major chronic respiratory disorder of infancy. The vast majority of BPD occurs in very low birth weight infants weighing less than 1,500 grams.

Although the incidence of low birth weight births declined from 1977 to 1987, the rate of very low birth weight births remained unchanged. These infants had a relative risk of neonatal death almost 200 times greater than full-term infants. Among survivors, eight percent had evidence of chronic pulmonary disease at forty weeks of age. The Institute of Medicine reported that very low birth weight infants who survived to one year of age were hospitalized for an average of 57 days after birth versus 3.5 days for full-term infants. Up to forty percent of these infants would be re-hospitalized almost two times for an average of 16 days versus 8.7 percent of normal birth weight infants for an average of 8 days.

DESIGN NARRATIVE:

The study had a nested case-control design. In the first year of the project, the diagnosis of BPD was standardized and a scoring system developed for grading the severity of the disease. Baseline data were collected on very low birth weight neonates admitted to seven participating neonatal intensive care units. Maternal interviews were conducted for neonates surviving seven days. The purpose of the interview was to collect information which m;ight be related to a predisposition to BPD, respiratory distress syndrome, or prematurity. Specific areas addressed included familial diseases in general and respiratory diseases in particular, familial patterns of prematurity, pregnancy and birth history, circumstances surrounding delivery, environmental exposures, health habits such as smoking, and socioeconomic variables. Severity scoring and diagnosis of the infants were based on the hospital log and routine x-rays. Final analysis compared infants with BPD to those without BPD, controlling for confounders and placing special emphasis on interaction effects. Full-term neonates served as controls.

The study was renewed in 1994 in order to re-contact at age 4-5, an existing cohort of 634 children with birth weight below 1501 grams. This cohort was unique in being representative of all very low birth weight survivors in a geographic area, and in being born during a time period of rapid advances in neonatal care (Aug 1, 1988-June 30, 1991). These children were enrolled at admission to any of 6 neonatal intensive care units (NlCUs) in Wisconsin and Iowa, and had extensive data already collected. The re-contact consisted of a telephone interview with parents, including standardized functional assessment. Information on health care and major diagnoses was also collected and verified by medical record abstracting. Information on socioeconomic and insurance status was obtained. The study responded to a need for global assessment of very low birth weight survivors, since most previous studies in the United States focused on specific morbidity outcomes. Special features of already existing data included scoring of respiratory distress syndrome and bronchopulmonary dysplasia severity with new validated severity indices, baseline family health history information and perinatal data. The cohort also spanned the time period from before general availability of exogenous surfactant to its availability as an investigational new drug (8/1/89) and availability for marketing (8/1/90). The study therefore provided an opportunity to investigate the long term effectiveness of this new therapy in an unselected NlCU population. The data were analyzed to describe the overall status of the cohort, to examine trends in outcomes across the time period, to find predictors of outcome among the neonatal and socioeconomic indicators and to investigate whether there was variability between centers.

The study was renewed in 1998 to continue follow-up of the cohort of 403 very low birth weight neonatal care survivors, born during August 1988-June1991. The time period of birth includes the approval dates for surfactant therapy. Hence, the first children to be treated with surfactant in general neonatal intensive care units (NICU) are now entering school age, providing an opportunity to evaluate school performance and to assess true chronicity of respiratory limitations. A large NICU and follow-up data base on the cohort contains extensive baseline assessment of respiratory disease, neonatal treatments and diagnoses, as well as functional assessment, health status and health care utilization at ages 4-6. The addition of data up to age 10 will confirm or dispute findings that functional outcome may be lower among children born after surfactant was released for marketing, and that the prevalence of long-term respiratory problems has remained the same. The new outcome data to be collected include school performance from school records and parent and teacher questionnaires, respiratory function by peak flow meters and respiratory symptoms and medications by parent interviews and questionnaires.

The study was renewed in 2002 to continue research in the evolving risk factors and outcomes of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and other neonatal conditions of very low birth weight (VLBW, < 1500g) infants and children. The renewal will comprehensively document the neonatal and early childhood course and outcomes of all VLBW births in Wisconsin occurring during the calendar years 2003 and 2004 (800-850 per year), using established methodology with added risk factor information to examine currently proposed inflammatory hypotheses of BPD etiology. The study will also implement and validate new diagnostic criteria for the severity of BPD developed by a recent NIH workshop.

研究の種類

観察的

入学 (実際)

2202

参加基準

研究者は、適格基準と呼ばれる特定の説明に適合する人を探します。これらの基準のいくつかの例は、人の一般的な健康状態または以前の治療です。

適格基準

就学可能な年齢

100年歳未満 (子、大人、高齢者)

健康ボランティアの受け入れ

いいえ

受講資格のある性別

全て

説明

- Birthweight less than 1500 grams

研究計画

このセクションでは、研究がどのように設計され、研究が何を測定しているかなど、研究計画の詳細を提供します。

研究はどのように設計されていますか?

デザインの詳細

コホートと介入

グループ/コホート
1988-1991
2003-2004

協力者と研究者

ここでは、この調査に関係する人々や組織を見つけることができます。

捜査官

  • Mari Palta、University of Wisconsin, Madison

出版物と役立つリンク

研究に関する情報を入力する責任者は、自発的にこれらの出版物を提供します。これらは、研究に関連するあらゆるものに関するものである可能性があります。

一般刊行物

研究記録日

これらの日付は、ClinicalTrials.gov への研究記録と要約結果の提出の進捗状況を追跡します。研究記録と報告された結果は、国立医学図書館 (NLM) によって審査され、公開 Web サイトに掲載される前に、特定の品質管理基準を満たしていることが確認されます。

主要日程の研究

研究開始

1987年7月1日

一次修了 (実際)

2008年7月1日

研究の完了 (実際)

2008年7月1日

試験登録日

最初に提出

2000年5月25日

QC基準を満たした最初の提出物

2000年5月25日

最初の投稿 (見積もり)

2000年5月26日

学習記録の更新

投稿された最後の更新 (実際)

2019年7月17日

QC基準を満たした最後の更新が送信されました

2019年7月12日

最終確認日

2019年7月1日

詳しくは

本研究に関する用語

その他の研究ID番号

  • 1997-152 (その他の識別子:Institutional Review Board)
  • R01HL038149 (米国 NIH グラント/契約)
  • 2002-209 (その他の識別子:Institutional Review Board)

医薬品およびデバイス情報、研究文書

米国FDA規制医薬品の研究

いいえ

米国FDA規制機器製品の研究

いいえ

この情報は、Web サイト clinicaltrials.gov から変更なしで直接取得したものです。研究の詳細を変更、削除、または更新するリクエストがある場合は、register@clinicaltrials.gov。 までご連絡ください。 clinicaltrials.gov に変更が加えられるとすぐに、ウェブサイトでも自動的に更新されます。

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