The HYdrocortisone for Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia Respiratory and Developmental (HYBRiD) outcomes study: protocol for a longitudinal cohort study.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS BMC Pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-11-14 DOI:10.1186/s12887-024-05198-9
Sara B DeMauro, Haresh Kirpalani, Kristina Ziolkowski, Susan Hintz, Kristi Watterberg, Jean Lowe, Seetha Shankaran, Sanjay Chawla, Betty Vohr, Michael Msall, Carl D'Angio, Bradley A Yoder, Khanh Lai, Sarah Winter, Tarah Colaizy, Stephanie Merhar, Carla M Bann, Marissa Trotta, Jamie Newman, Aruna Natarajan, Abhik Das
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Abstract

Background: Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) affects up to half of extremely preterm infants, and is associated with adverse long-term respiratory, neurodevelopmental, and educational sequelae and costly health service and family economic outcomes. The NICHD Neonatal Research Network Hydrocortisone for Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (BPD) Trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of hydrocortisone treatment to prevent BPD in high-risk infants. The trial enrolled 800 very preterm infants with respiratory failure and followed the participants until 2 years corrected age to assess safety of the trial intervention. Longer-term impacts of hydrocortisone exposure and severity of BPD on functional outcomes of high-risk infants remain unknown. The HYdrocortisone for BPD Respiratory and Developmental (HYBRiD) Outcomes Study extends follow-up of all surviving children enrolled in the Hydrocortisone for BPD Trial until early school age. It aims to characterize the childhood functional motor, cognitive, academic, and pulmonary outcomes of this large, well-phenotyped trial cohort.

Methods: Parents of surviving trial participants complete telephone questionnaires when their children are 3 and 4 years corrected age. A single in-person study visit takes place at early school age (5 years, 0 months to 7 years, 11 months corrected age). Children undergo a multidimensional assessment of functional outcomes and parents complete a battery of questionnaires. In 5 of 19 participating centers, respiratory mechanics are evaluated with impulse oscillometry.

Discussion: The HYBRiD Outcomes Study will be the largest and most comprehensive evaluation to date of the functional early school age outcomes of children with a history of severe neonatal lung disease and of children exposed to HC during infancy. This will substantially improve understanding of the longer-term implications of severe neonatal lung disease; provide data to facilitate the development of future randomized intervention trials in this population; and inform public policy by enhancing knowledge about school age resource requirements in children with a history of prematurity and lung disease.

Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov ID NCT01353313. Primary trial registration 5/11/11 modified to include followup through school age 12/13/17. This manuscript reflects version 3 of the trial manuscript, dated 10/12/2020.

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氢化可的松治疗支气管肺发育不良呼吸和发育(HYBRiD)结果研究:纵向队列研究方案。
背景:多达一半的极早产儿会患上支气管肺发育不良 (BPD),该病与长期不良的呼吸系统、神经发育和教育后遗症以及昂贵的医疗服务和家庭经济后果有关。NICHD 新生儿研究网络氢化可的松治疗支气管肺发育不良 (BPD) 试验评估了氢化可的松治疗预防高危婴儿 BPD 的有效性和安全性。该试验招募了 800 名患有呼吸衰竭的早产儿,并对参与者进行随访,直至其两岁,以评估试验干预措施的安全性。氢化可的松暴露和 BPD 严重程度对高风险婴儿功能结果的长期影响仍是未知数。氢化可的松治疗 BPD 呼吸和发育(HYBRiD)结果研究将对所有参加氢化可的松治疗 BPD 试验的存活儿童的随访延长至学龄早期。该研究旨在了解这一规模庞大、表型清晰的试验队列的儿童功能运动、认知、学业和肺部结果:方法:幸存试验参与者的父母在其子女 3 岁和 4 岁时填写电话问卷。在学龄初期(5 岁 0 个月至 7 岁 11 个月矫正年龄)进行一次面对面的研究访问。儿童接受多维度的功能结果评估,家长则完成一系列问卷调查。在 19 个参与中心中的 5 个中心,呼吸力学通过脉冲振荡测量法进行评估:讨论:HYBRiD 结果研究将是迄今为止对有严重新生儿肺病史的儿童和婴儿期接触过 HC 的儿童学龄早期功能结果进行的规模最大、最全面的评估。这将极大地提高人们对新生儿重症肺病长期影响的认识;提供数据以促进未来在该人群中开展随机干预试验;通过加强对有早产史和肺病史的儿童学龄期资源需求的了解,为公共政策提供信息。试验注册:clinicaltrials.gov ID NCT01353313。初步试验注册于 2011 年 11 月 5 日进行了修改,以包括直至 17 年 12 月 13 日学龄期的随访。本手稿反映的是试验手稿的第 3 版,日期为 2020 年 12 月 10 日。
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来源期刊
BMC Pediatrics
BMC Pediatrics PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.20%
发文量
683
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Pediatrics is an open access journal publishing peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of health care in neonates, children and adolescents, as well as related molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology.
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