Still Perpetuating Prejudice Against Preterms

Our commentary has just been published in Paediatrics and Child Health, the CPS journal together with a response from the Society. (they seem to be open access, but I am not certain).

I am disappointed by the response, but not surprised. Our commentary was co-written with over 30 academic neonatologists from around the world, 16 of whom are Canadians, and a Canadian parent representative. The concerns that we have about the process and the content were largely dismissed. I would have hoped that the opposition of many high profile Canadian Neonatologists, including 3 with a PhD in ethics and the past chair of that very committee, to some of the recommendations would have led to a more thoughtful response.

The response notes some things which I think were positive about the position statement, including the description of the shared decision-making model, and the recognition in the text of the statement, that risk factors other than gestational age should be taken into account. However it fails to acknowledge many of our other concerns.

The response states that ‘the substantive question is: Should GA be used for counseling an decision making?’ I disagree that that is the substantive question. I do not think there is any question that GA should be one of the factors taken into account in constructing a risk model for an individual family. I think the question is rather: should GA be the over-riding factor in decision-making? When GA is subject to substantial inaccuracy in 96% of pregnancies, when GA is less important in prognosis than birth weight, when the implications of being born at a particular GA are so different between boys and girls, between those with and without steroids, between infants with chorioamnionitis and without. I think that GA must be included in our considerations, but not as the major focus, and not as the critical decision-making threshold that it is in these recommendations.

The response notes that many mothers present initially to primary or secondary level facilities, and it was for them that much of this simplification was introduced. Unfortunately however, the recommendations are not written in order to be useful for those practitioners; there is no recommendation about when to consult with the tertiary referral unit, nor when to transfer a mother with threatened preterm labour. Such a recommendation could indeed be very useful, but is missing from the position statement.

The points that still need to be addressed by the CPS and are not mentioned in this response are as follows:

Why are the thresholds for changing intervention at those particular points? What is the ethically relevant distinction between an infant born at 22 weeks and 6 days, and one born at 23 weeks and 0 days? In a statement regarding ethical decision making it seems strange that the ethical underpinnings are nowhere discussed.

On a related point, why was there no discussion of quality of life? As QoL does not differ between survivors of different gestational ages, what is the justification for recommending intervention at some GA and not at others? In their response, the CPS mention that they agree that discussion with parents should include balanced information about quality of life, that is a welcome acknowledgement, but is absent from the position statement as published and approved.

In their response the CPS deny that there are any errors in table 2. As I noted in a previous post, every one of the percentages in table 2 is incorrect. To give one example again, table 2 states that the percentage of survival free of adverse outcome at 18 to 24 months in the article by Synnes et al was 35% at 23 weeks GA. In reality the original paper notes that the survival rate among live births rate was 22.5% (9 of 40), in another part of the article it is noted that the risk of moderate impairment at 4 1/2 years was 20% and of severe impairment was 10% (a statement that appears to relate to infants of all gestational ages, but without a definition of ‘severe impairment’ and there are no data about outcomes at 18 to 24 months). So survival free of serious adverse outcome, is either about 20% or about 16%. Table 2 also gives the survival free of disability at 23 weeks from the paper by Jacobs as being 35% at 23 weeks, whereas overall survival was lower than that, 29% pre-surfactant and 21% post-surfactant. Jacobs et al includes 24 babies of 23 weeks who were followed, of whom 4 were severely impaired at 18 to 24 months. So survival without severe impairment is actually somewhere around 23% pre-surfactant and 17% post-surfactant. Furthermore, survival at 24 weeks was 53% pre surfactant and 58% post-surfactant, with 39% pre and 21% post-surfactant being severely impaired, while the table states that there was 57% survival without severe impairment. Finally the article by Charlene Robertson doesn’t include any of the numbers in the table. There are bar charts showing survival rates for each week of gestational age, divided into groups of 3 years. So to get numbers for the table, you have to estimate what the number is for each group of 3 years, then add them together, and hope that you have it about right, there isn’t even a group of infants at 23 weeks, the figures are given of infants less than or equal to 23 weeks, and we don’t know how many are 23 weeks, and how many are less. When I try to replicate that questionable process,  I get about 86 babies of 23 weeks or less with around a 10% survival, about half of whom have an impairment. This is nowhere near the 50% survival without severe neurodevelopmental outcome as stated in the position statement.

In some ways this is unimportant as the CPS never state how low a ‘survival free of adverse outcomes’ should be in order for active intervention to be inappropriate. But it is important that a position statement is at least accurate in its presentation of prior data. If you can’t trust those figures, can you trust any of the figures in the statement?

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Being a Parent and a Doctor

A story published in the PNEJM from a mother of a patient with epilepsy that was very difficult to treat who is also a physician, as is the father. Their boy eventually had seizure surgery, more than once.

She ends the piece with this quote:

“Is it easier or harder to have a sick child when both parents are doctors?” But this is the wrong question. There is no hard, no easy. Only fear and love, panic and relief, shaking and not shaking.

(the ‘shaking’ refers to her son’s seizures).

Annie and I have been asked the same question many times, about our experiences as parents in the NICU. I would echo the sentiment of this author, it was no harder, no easier, it is hard for everyone who has a critically ill child. There was fear and love, panic and relief, and eventually, for us, resolution and acceptance.

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Improving Research

I have mentioned Richard Lehman’s weekly journal review here before. This week’s edition starts with a critique of a trial published in the PNEJM, funded by a company that makes a new antiviral, the results show a reduction in virus shedding in adults with Herpes randomized to get the new drug. Richard Lehman asks

Does this reduction in shedding actually have any clinical significance? At what point should the FDA release it for use on the general population? What should the end points be, and what should be the duration of the next trial? I think these issues should be a matter of public debate, and not a matter for AiCuris [the manufacturer] to decide. Same with all new drugs. It is we who will be using them, we who will pay for them, and we who stand to be harmed by them.

Exactly. There are too many trials with surrogate end-points of unknown or dubious clinical significance, this new trial publication doesn’t give any evidence that the patients were actually better off with the new drug.

Which leads me to the final two papers in the Lancet series on improving quality and reducing waste in research.

Glasziou P, Altman DG, Bossuyt P, Boutron I, Clarke M, Julious S, Michie S, Moher D, Wager E: Reducing waste from incomplete or unusable reports of biomedical research. The Lancet 2014, 383(9913):267-276.
Chan A-W, Song F, Vickers A, Jefferson T, Dickersin K, Gøtzsche PC, Krumholz HM, Ghersi D, van der Worp HB: Increasing value and reducing waste: Addressing inaccessible research. The Lancet 2014, 383(9913):257-266.

Both of them again have suggestions for improvement, and the article by Paul Glasziou, in particular I find very insightful; journal editors should all take note! (and reviewers like me.)

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Treatment of hypotension in the very preterm infant

When hypotension should be treated and with what are important and difficult questions in the care of the very preterm infant. The international HIP collaboration (see the link in the side bar) has been funded to try and find some answers. One thing we wanted to do at the outset was to see if things had changed much recently, which has led to our first publication (Stranak Z, Semberova J, Barrington K, O’Donnell C, Marlow N, Naulaers G, Dempsey E, On behalf of the HIP consortium: International survey on diagnosis and management of hypotension in extremely preterm babies. Eur J Pediatr 2014:1-6) 73% of the respondents defined hypotension as a mean blood pressure less than the GA in weeks. When hypotension is diagnosed then the therapeutic approaches are very variable, and seem to differ by region, southern European babies are less likely to be hypovolemic it seems.

There is as much variability as in the past, but more units are using functional echocardiography to analyze the hemodynamic situation, about 3/4 of our respondents).

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Fetal surgery for diaphragmatic hernias: are we there yet?

This new Australian publication asks the question  in its title that many of us are asking. (Cundy TP, Gardener GJ, Andersen CC, Kirby CP, McBride CA, Teague WJ: Fetoscopic endoluminal tracheal occlusion (feto) for congenital diaphragmatic hernia in australia and new zealand: Are we willing, able, both or neither? Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health 2014).

In case you are wondering, this means doing an amnioscopy, and then doing a tracheoscopy on the fetus to deposit a balloon that occludes the trachea. Not a straightforward procedure! Then in some protocols a second procedure before term to remove the balloon. The article that I cited reviews the literature and notes that there are now 9 reports of various trials including 4 very small RCTs. Recent data show much less prematurity than the older publications, as techniques have evolved. The FETENDO technique does look like there is  a good chance that it decreases mortality in the most severe cases.

In answer to my own question, posed in the title, I don’t think we are ready for widespread adoption, but ongoing studies will be important. I think that perhaps the technique should be available for very high risk cases who are not willing to be randomized, but who will be evaluated prospectively, as an ‘innovative therapy’.

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Preterm twins seem to care for one another

There has been a lot of talk about co-bedding twins in the NICU, but relatively little research.

I was involved in an RCT of co-bedding in preterm twins, looking at responses to painful stimuli (67 pars of twins were recruited). We randomized twin pairs who were between 28 weeks and 36 weeks and needed a heelstick to either stay in their separate cots, or be placed touching each other in the same incubator or cot. The primary outcome of the study was the PIPP scores, which were not different (it is very interesting that all the babies received sucrose adn were offered a soother, so the peak PIPP scores only went up to just over 7 in each group, quite a modest elevation), but a secondary outcome analysis showed that the babies in co-bedding settled down faster than the controls, returning to baseline heart rate and saturation levels faster.

Marsha Campell-Yeo, who was the PI for the study, has just published the analysis of the salivary cortisols in the babies, which were slightly lower at baseline in co-bedding (not significant) and which increased in the controls, but not in the co-bedded twins after the painful event. So 20 minutes after the heelstick the levels were significantly lower in the co-bedded twins than the controls.

We were interested during the planning phase to see if the co-twins might get stressed by the procedure (and a bit concerned that it might be an adverse effect of co-bedding), there wasn’t any sign of that happening. The question of the mechanism is interesting; I think that human contact is comforting, re-assuring and pleasurable, certainly hugging my kids is. I don’t know if it really matters whether it is a co-twin or if the same might occur with another random baby from the NICU, but I don’t think we will do the study to find out.

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Improving research

A series of articles from a group of the great and the good in clinical research methodology and design. (Including Iain Chalmers and John Ioannidis). They all seem to be open access, and make some very important points and good suggestions, that I can only hope will be followed.

Chalmers I, Bracken MB, Djulbegovic B, Garattini S, Grant J, Gülmezoglu AM, Howells DW, Ioannidis JPA, Oliver S: How to increase value and reduce waste when research priorities are set. The Lancet 2014, 383(9912):156-165.

Ioannidis JPA, Greenland S, Hlatky MA, Khoury MJ, Macleod MR, Moher D, Schulz KF, Tibshirani R: Increasing value and reducing waste in research design, conduct, and analysis. The Lancet 2014, 383(9912):166-175.

Salman RA-S, Beller E, Kagan J, Hemminki E, Phillips RS, Savulescu J, Macleod M, Wisely J, Chalmers I: Increasing value and reducing waste in biomedical research regulation and management. The Lancet 2014, 383(9912):176-185.

There is a striking picture of a researcher standing behind the pile of papers submitted to a regulatory committee (which I must admit was a much more complex undertaking than most research, but is a cute illustration of an extreme version of what we have to deal with).

Research Bureaucracy

The articles are certainly not all about how to reduce paperwork, but also how to improve the relevance and the quality of research.

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Comments about ‘More than a Diagnosis’

My recent post about Annie Janvier’s paper, which described the experiences of families who had an antenatal diagnosis of trisomy 13 or trisomy 18 generated a lot of comments (at least a lot for my blog). Many of them are parents recounting their own experiences, and how they illustrate or differ from those described by Guon et al. If you are interested a few brief minutes of reading is quite educational.

I also had a comment (verbal) from Annie, who noted that I described the study subjects as families who had ‘decided not to terminate the pregnancy’. She scolded me (gently) for using that phrase as a negative, rather than stating that they ‘continued the pregnancy’. I certainly didn’t mean to be negative, but she is right that language is powerful, and the automatic assumption that the default response to such a diagnosis is termination, is the source of many of the problems that families may experience. So my apologies.

Also 2 of the responses to the post noted that there is now an international alliance to aid and support families (International Trisomy 13/18 Alliance
http://www.internationaltrisomyalliance.com): as well as the web site and the newsletter, they have produced a series of educational booklets for families, including one for families who experience a prenatal diagnosis (which you can find on this page). In addition to being factually accurate, the booklets are written by families so they give a much more complete description of family experiences.

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Cohort study of Probiotics in our NICU

Our article describing the results of introducing routine probiotic prophylaxis in our NICU has just become available on-line.

Janvier A, Malo J, Barrington KJ: Cohort Study of Probiotics in a North American Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. The Journal of pediatrics 2014.  We had about 300 babies in each of the 2 cohorts, all the babies less than 32 weeks who were admitted during the last 17 months before probiotics, and the first 17 months after introducing routine probiotics (the slightly unusual times were because we had 2 months during which the stuff was being introduced where several babies had probiotics started later in their life, such as after an episode of feeding intolerance, we excluded those 2 months). Our unit, that already had the only other evidence-based practices for reducing NEC already in place, that is we had a feeding protocol and we were actively, and successfully, promoting breast feeding (over 90% of the mothers producing breast milk up to one month of age).

We show that after we introduced routine probiotic prophylaxis into our NICU the incidence of NEC decreased by about 50%. There was a very small and non-significant reduction in nosocomial sepsis, no cases of sepsis with probiotic organisms, and a small and non-significant decrease in mortality. I tried to correct for potential differences in risk profile using logistic regression, which confirmed the results.

The preparation we used is readily available in Canada; it is also available in the USA but I have heard that the components are slightly different in the US, as it contains a prebiotic, please confirm this before you consider using it outside of Canada.

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NIDCAP, battling systematic reviews.

I mentioned Arne Ohlsson’s review of the NIDCAP studies in a previous post. A new systematic review comes to different conclusions. This review (Fazilleau L, Parienti JJ, Bellot A, Guillois B: Nidcap in preterm infants and the neurodevelopmental effect in the first 2 years. Archives of Disease in Childhood – Fetal and Neonatal Edition 2013) comes to those different conclusions I think because they have mixed together a lot of outcome data that were kept separated by Ohlsson and Jacobs, for example the new review mixes in a single meta-analysis all the Bayley scores between 9 months and 2 years of age, which I think is really questionable.

I think it is important to note that, as often happens in medicine, the earliest tiny trials (with n of 38 or less in 6 of the 9 trials) are very positive, later larger trials, by other independent investigators, have much smaller, or no benefit.

When I was preparing this post, I pulled out my copy of the very first publication about NIDCAP, my marks on the paper copy (gone are the days of useful graffiti and exclamation marks on the photocopy!) reflect my scepticism at the time, the first study only included 38 babies in total, and randomized the infants after 48 hours of age; nevertheless there was a significant reduction in severe intraventricular hemorrhage, and absolutely everything else was better in the NIDCAP group.

Don’t get me wrong, I think that a more developmentally sensitive approach to care of our patients has made huge improvements in how humane our care is, and has probably contributed to the progressive improvement in outcomes over the recent past. I am very happy to see a flexed preterm infant, sleeping soundly cuddled in an incubator and being largely left alone, and the necessary interventions being performed in the least disturbing way possible. On the other hand I think the more recent larger RCTs, with longer follow up are more realistic reflections of the real-life benefits that NIDCAP may give, when compared to routine care which should always include good pain control, and reduction of excessive adverse stimulation.

Maybe some of the diminution of effect of NIDCAP over time, is that the treatment of the control groups has changed.

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