Extensive cardiopulmonary resuscitation of preterm neonates at birth and mortality and developmental outcomes

2019 
Abstract Objective To compare mortality and neurodevelopmental outcomes of extremely low gestational age neonates who received delivery room extensive cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DR-CPR) to those who did not require DR-CPR. Methods Preterm neonates born at Results Of the 2760 neonates born, 173 were excluded and remaining 2587 eligible neonates were included in our study. Of these 2068 had outcome data (80%) of whom 190 (9.2%) received DR-CPR. DR-CPR was independently associated with mortality or neurodevelopmental impairment (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.76; 95% CI 1.21–2.55) and mortality alone (aOR1.94; 95% CI 1.33–2.83). DR-CPR was also associated with increased odds of motor impairment (aOR 2.03; 95% CI 1.28–3.23). Conclusion In extremely low gestational age neonates, DR-CPR was associated with higher odds of the composite outcome of mortality or neurodevelopmental impairment, mortality alone, and lower motor scores at 18 to 24 months’ corrected age.
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