Pilot randomized trial of hydrocortisone in ventilator-dependent extremely preterm infants: effects on regional brain volumes

Nehal A Parikh, Kathleen A Kennedy, Robert E Lasky, Georgia E McDavid, Jon E Tyson, Nehal A Parikh, Kathleen A Kennedy, Robert E Lasky, Georgia E McDavid, Jon E Tyson

Abstract

Objective: To test the hypothesis that high-risk ventilator-dependent extremely low birth weight (birth weight ≤1000 g) infants treated with 7 days of hydrocortisone will have larger total brain tissue volumes than placebo treated infants.

Study design: A predetermined sample size of 64 extremely low birth weight infants, between 10-21 days old and ventilator-dependent with a respiratory index score ≥2, were randomized to systemic hydrocortisone (17 mg/kg cumulative dose) or saline placebo. Primary outcome was total brain tissue volume. Volumetric magnetic resonance imaging was performed at 38 weeks postmenstrual age; brain tissue regions were segmented and quantified automatically with a high degree of accuracy and 9 structures were segmented manually. All analyses of regional brain volumes were adjusted by postmenstrual age at magnetic resonance imaging scan.

Results: The study groups were similar at baseline and 8 infants died in each arm. Unadjusted total brain tissue volume (mean ± SD) in the hydrocortisone (N = 23) and placebo treated infants (N = 21) was 272 ± 40.3 cm(3) and 277.8 ± 59.1 cm(3), respectively (adjusted mean difference: 6.35 cm(3) (95% CI: (-20.8, 32.5); P = .64). Three of the 31 hydrocortisone treated infants and 5 of the 33 placebo treated infants survived without severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia (relative risk 0.62, 95% CI: 0.13, 2.66; P = .49). No significant differences were noted in prespecified secondary outcomes of regional structural volumes or days on respiratory support. No adverse effects of hydrocortisone were observed.

Conclusions: Low dose hydrocortisone in high-risk ventilator-dependent infants after a week of age had no discernible effect on regional brain volumes or pulmonary outcomes prior to neonatal intensive care unit discharge.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Copyright © 2013 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Flow diagram of the patient progress through the parallel randomized trial of two groups.

Source: PubMed

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