BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The European Union Nitric Oxide trial was designed to assess the potential benefits of inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) compared with placebo in infants with respiratory failure. This follow-up study evaluated respiratory, neurodevelopmental, and other outcomes for infants entered into the European Union Nitric Oxide trial to age 2 years. METHODS: In a multicenter, randomized, double-blind study, preterm infants born at <29 weeks' gestation with moderate respiratory failure were allocated to receive iNO (5 ppm) or placebo for 7 to 21 days. Subjects underwent assessments at 1 and 2 years corrected for prematurity. RESULTS: At 36 weeks' postmenstrual age, 696 of 792 infants were alive; 4 in the iNO arm subsequently died before age 2 years compared with 7 in the control arm. We evaluated 95% of the survivors at 12 months and 90% at 2 years. In the iNO arm, 244 of 363 (67.2%) infants had survived without disability at age 2 years compared with 270 of 374 (72.2%) who received placebo (P = .094). Mean (SD) cognitive composite scores (Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, third edition) were 94 (13) in the iNO group and 95 (14) in the placebo group; in the iNO group, 19% scored <85 and 9.5% developed cerebral palsy compared with 13.3% and 9%, respectively. There were no significant differences in hospitalizations overall or due to respiratory illness in use of home oxygen therapy or respiratory medications, in growth, or in other health outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: At 2 years of age, low-dose (5 ppm) iNO started early (<24 hours after birth) for a median of 20 days did not affect neurodevelopmental or other health outcomes.

Two-year outcomes of a randomized controlled trial of inhaled nitric oxide in premature infants / Xavier Durrmeyer; Helmut Hummler; Manuel Sanchez-Luna, Virgilio P. Carnielli; David Field; Anne Greenough; Bart Van Overmeire; Baldvin Jonsson; Mikko Hallman; Jean-Christophe Mercier; Neil Marlow; Samantha Johnson; James Baldassarre; for the European Union Nitric Oxide Study Group [..; Giacomo Faldella; ..].. - In: PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 0031-4005. - STAMPA. - 132:3(2013), pp. e695-e703. [10.1542/peds.2013-0007]

Two-year outcomes of a randomized controlled trial of inhaled nitric oxide in premature infants

FALDELLA, GIACOMO;
2013

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The European Union Nitric Oxide trial was designed to assess the potential benefits of inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) compared with placebo in infants with respiratory failure. This follow-up study evaluated respiratory, neurodevelopmental, and other outcomes for infants entered into the European Union Nitric Oxide trial to age 2 years. METHODS: In a multicenter, randomized, double-blind study, preterm infants born at <29 weeks' gestation with moderate respiratory failure were allocated to receive iNO (5 ppm) or placebo for 7 to 21 days. Subjects underwent assessments at 1 and 2 years corrected for prematurity. RESULTS: At 36 weeks' postmenstrual age, 696 of 792 infants were alive; 4 in the iNO arm subsequently died before age 2 years compared with 7 in the control arm. We evaluated 95% of the survivors at 12 months and 90% at 2 years. In the iNO arm, 244 of 363 (67.2%) infants had survived without disability at age 2 years compared with 270 of 374 (72.2%) who received placebo (P = .094). Mean (SD) cognitive composite scores (Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, third edition) were 94 (13) in the iNO group and 95 (14) in the placebo group; in the iNO group, 19% scored <85 and 9.5% developed cerebral palsy compared with 13.3% and 9%, respectively. There were no significant differences in hospitalizations overall or due to respiratory illness in use of home oxygen therapy or respiratory medications, in growth, or in other health outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: At 2 years of age, low-dose (5 ppm) iNO started early (<24 hours after birth) for a median of 20 days did not affect neurodevelopmental or other health outcomes.
2013
Two-year outcomes of a randomized controlled trial of inhaled nitric oxide in premature infants / Xavier Durrmeyer; Helmut Hummler; Manuel Sanchez-Luna, Virgilio P. Carnielli; David Field; Anne Greenough; Bart Van Overmeire; Baldvin Jonsson; Mikko Hallman; Jean-Christophe Mercier; Neil Marlow; Samantha Johnson; James Baldassarre; for the European Union Nitric Oxide Study Group [..; Giacomo Faldella; ..].. - In: PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 0031-4005. - STAMPA. - 132:3(2013), pp. e695-e703. [10.1542/peds.2013-0007]
Xavier Durrmeyer; Helmut Hummler; Manuel Sanchez-Luna, Virgilio P. Carnielli; David Field; Anne Greenough; Bart Van Overmeire; Baldvin Jonsson; Mikko Hallman; Jean-Christophe Mercier; Neil Marlow; Samantha Johnson; James Baldassarre; for the European Union Nitric Oxide Study Group [..; Giacomo Faldella; ..].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/531553
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