In preterm infants with a high rate of prenatal glucocorticoids, early surfactant administration was not found to be superior to late treatment in terms of relevant outcome variables.
We investigated the association between the interleukin 6 (IL-6)-174-genotype and unfavorable outcomes in preterm infants since it has been reported that the IL-6-174GG-genotype is associated with increased susceptibility to sepsis, and the IL-6-174CC-genotype is more common in preterm infants with severe intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). We studied 1206 preterm infants with a birth weight below 1500 g. In contrast to previously published data, the frequency of IVH grade IV, periventricular leukomalacia, ventricular-peritoneal-shunting or death was not different between infants with different IL-6-genotypes: IL-6-174GG (n ¼ 430) 8%, IL-6-174GC (n ¼ 605) 9% and IL-6-174CC (n ¼ 167) 12% (P ¼ 0.2 for IL-6-174CC vs GG þ GC). Furthermore, we were not able to confirm previously reported association between sepsis and the IL-6-174GG-genotype. Blood-culture-proven sepsis occurred in 19% of IL-6-174GG-carriers (n ¼ 157), 26% of IL-6-174GC-carriers (n ¼ 193) and 27% of infants carrying the IL-6-174CC-genotype (n ¼ 67). We were not able to confirm previously reported associations between sepsis, cerebral injury and the IL-6-174-genotype in VLBW-infants.
We could not confirm previously reported associations of hemostasis gene variants and development of intraventricular hemorrhage in very low birth weight infants. To better understand gene-disease associations in very low birth weight infants, the prospective development of large-scale cohorts with well-defined phenotypes and corresponding DNA samples is essential.
The aim of the study was to determine if high-dose bovine surfactant (Alveofact, initially 100 mg/kg birth weight) would improve oxygenation compared with low-dose surfactant (50 mg/kg birth weight) administered intratracheally within 1 h after birth. Inclusion criteria included gestational age 24-29 weeks and birth weight 500-1500 g, intubation and mechanical ventilation, absence of congenital malformations and bacterial infections. Retreatment was considered if the fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) was > 0.4 (dose 50 mg/kg birth weight). The primary endpoint was level of oxygenation (PaO2/FiO2) 2 h after treatment. The study design was a sequential analysis using a triangular test with alpha = 0.05 and 95% power to detect a 25% improvement in the endpoint. Oxygenation was improved significantly with high-dose (n = 42) compared to low-dose treatment (n = 48): 30.9 +/- 15.0 kPa (231.5 +/- 112.7 mmHg) versus 24.1 +/- 15.7 kPa (180.6 +/- 118.0 mmHg) (mean +/- SD). The survival rate was 83% in both groups and the incidence of pulmonary interstitial emphysema was 33% versus 14% with the high-dose treatment. We conclude that high-dose surfactant significantly improved oxygenation and reduced lung barotrauma. An initial dose greater than 50 mg/kg birth weight of surfactant is required for optimal acute response.
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