Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months

Objective·To analyze the neurodevelopmental outcomes and risk factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants with gestational age≤34 weeks at corrected age of 18 months.Methods·The early-to-moderate preterm infants hospitalized in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of Shanghai Children's Hospital from...

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Main Authors: SHEN Li, HUANG Hengye, YU Guangjun
Format: Article
Language:zho
Published: Editorial Office of Journal of Shanghai Jiao Tong University (Medical Science) 2023-04-01
Series:Shanghai Jiaotong Daxue xuebao. Yixue ban
Subjects:
Online Access:https://xuebao.shsmu.edu.cn/article/2023/1674-8115/1674-8115-2023-43-4-445.shtml
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author SHEN Li
HUANG Hengye
YU Guangjun
author_facet SHEN Li
HUANG Hengye
YU Guangjun
author_sort SHEN Li
collection DOAJ
description Objective·To analyze the neurodevelopmental outcomes and risk factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants with gestational age≤34 weeks at corrected age of 18 months.Methods·The early-to-moderate preterm infants hospitalized in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of Shanghai Children's Hospital from January 2013 to April 2020, and regularly followed up after discharge were included in this study. Demographic and clinically relevant data of preterm infants and their parents were collected. The infants were divided into the neurodevelopmental retardation group and the normal neurodevelopment group according to their Gesell Development Schedule (GDS) scores at corrected age of 18 months. The demographic characteristics of preterm infants, birth status, demographic characteristics of parents and prenatal examinations between the two groups were compared, and stepwise Logistic regression was used to explore the factors influencing neurodevelopmental outcomes in preterm infants.Results·A total of 929 preterm infants were included in the study, including 527 boys (56.7%) and 402 girls (43.3%), with a mean gestational age of (31.06±2.23) weeks and 138 (14.9%) extremely preterm infants. A total of 147 infants (15.8%) had neurodevelopmental retardation of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months, with abnormalities of 7.4%, 9.7%, 17.9%, 14.2% and 13.7% in gross motor, fine motor, language, adaptive behavior and personal-social behavior, respectively. A comparison of the clinical characteristics between the neurodevelopmental retardation group and the normal neurodevelopment group revealed statistically significant differences in terms of gender, whether the baby was an extremely preterm infant, birth weight, mode of delivery, and occurrence of intrauterine distress (all P<0.05). Stepwise Logistic regression analysis showed that boys (OR=1.60, 95%CI 1.05‒2.44, P=0.028), cesarean section (OR=1.67, 95%CI 1.08‒2.60, P=0.022), extremely preterm infants (OR=2.20, 95%CI 1.34‒3.62, P=0.002) and intrauterine distress (OR=5.03, 95%CI 2.11‒11.99, P=0.000) were the risk factors for neurodevelopmental retardation.Conclusion·Boys, extremely preterm infants, cesarean section and intrauterine distress may increase the neurodevelopmental retardation risk of early-to-moderate preterm infants and improving follow-up management of these preterm infants should be focused on and enhanced.
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spelling doaj.art-77bb46858d65421190222d0115a3744a2023-12-20T06:18:37ZzhoEditorial Office of Journal of Shanghai Jiao Tong University (Medical Science)Shanghai Jiaotong Daxue xuebao. Yixue ban1674-81152023-04-0143444545210.3969/j.issn.1674-8115.2023.04.0061674-8115(2023)04-0445-08Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 monthsSHEN Li0HUANG Hengye1YU Guangjun2Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Public Health, Shanghai 200025, ChinaShanghai Jiao Tong University School of Public Health, Shanghai 200025, ChinaChildren's Precision Medicine Engineering Technology Research Center, Shanghai Children's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai 200040, ChinaObjective·To analyze the neurodevelopmental outcomes and risk factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants with gestational age≤34 weeks at corrected age of 18 months.Methods·The early-to-moderate preterm infants hospitalized in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of Shanghai Children's Hospital from January 2013 to April 2020, and regularly followed up after discharge were included in this study. Demographic and clinically relevant data of preterm infants and their parents were collected. The infants were divided into the neurodevelopmental retardation group and the normal neurodevelopment group according to their Gesell Development Schedule (GDS) scores at corrected age of 18 months. The demographic characteristics of preterm infants, birth status, demographic characteristics of parents and prenatal examinations between the two groups were compared, and stepwise Logistic regression was used to explore the factors influencing neurodevelopmental outcomes in preterm infants.Results·A total of 929 preterm infants were included in the study, including 527 boys (56.7%) and 402 girls (43.3%), with a mean gestational age of (31.06±2.23) weeks and 138 (14.9%) extremely preterm infants. A total of 147 infants (15.8%) had neurodevelopmental retardation of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months, with abnormalities of 7.4%, 9.7%, 17.9%, 14.2% and 13.7% in gross motor, fine motor, language, adaptive behavior and personal-social behavior, respectively. A comparison of the clinical characteristics between the neurodevelopmental retardation group and the normal neurodevelopment group revealed statistically significant differences in terms of gender, whether the baby was an extremely preterm infant, birth weight, mode of delivery, and occurrence of intrauterine distress (all P<0.05). Stepwise Logistic regression analysis showed that boys (OR=1.60, 95%CI 1.05‒2.44, P=0.028), cesarean section (OR=1.67, 95%CI 1.08‒2.60, P=0.022), extremely preterm infants (OR=2.20, 95%CI 1.34‒3.62, P=0.002) and intrauterine distress (OR=5.03, 95%CI 2.11‒11.99, P=0.000) were the risk factors for neurodevelopmental retardation.Conclusion·Boys, extremely preterm infants, cesarean section and intrauterine distress may increase the neurodevelopmental retardation risk of early-to-moderate preterm infants and improving follow-up management of these preterm infants should be focused on and enhanced.https://xuebao.shsmu.edu.cn/article/2023/1674-8115/1674-8115-2023-43-4-445.shtmlpreterm infantneurodevelopmentneurodevelopmental retardationrisk factorgesell development schedule
spellingShingle SHEN Li
HUANG Hengye
YU Guangjun
Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months
Shanghai Jiaotong Daxue xuebao. Yixue ban
preterm infant
neurodevelopment
neurodevelopmental retardation
risk factor
gesell development schedule
title Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months
title_full Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months
title_fullStr Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months
title_full_unstemmed Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months
title_short Current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early-to-moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months
title_sort current status of neurodevelopmental outcomes and its influencing factors of early to moderate preterm infants at corrected age of 18 months
topic preterm infant
neurodevelopment
neurodevelopmental retardation
risk factor
gesell development schedule
url https://xuebao.shsmu.edu.cn/article/2023/1674-8115/1674-8115-2023-43-4-445.shtml
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