| Literature DB >> 20331899 |
Lisa M Askie1, Roberta A Ballard, Gary Cutter, Carlo Dani, Diana Elbourne, David Field, Jean-Michel Hascoet, Anna Maria Hibbs, John P Kinsella, Jean-Christophe Mercier, Wade Rich, Michael D Schreiber, Pimol Srisuparp, Nim V Subhedar, Krisa P Van Meurs, Merryn Voysey, Keith Barrington, Richard A Ehrenkranz, Neil Finer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preterm infants requiring assisted ventilation are at significant risk of both pulmonary and cerebral injury. Inhaled Nitric Oxide, an effective therapy for pulmonary hypertension and hypoxic respiratory failure in the full term infant, has also been studied in preterm infants. The most recent Cochrane review of preterm infants includes 11 studies and 3,370 participants. The results show a statistically significant reduction in the combined outcome of death or chronic lung disease (CLD) in two studies with routine use of iNO in intubated preterm infants. However, uncertainty remains as a larger study (Kinsella 2006) showed no significant benefit for iNO for this combined outcome. Also, trials that included very ill infants do not demonstrate significant benefit. One trial of iNO treatment at a later postnatal age reported a decrease in the incidence of CLD. The aim of this individual patient meta-analysis is to confirm or refute these potentially conflicting results and to determine the extent to which patient or treatment characteristics may explain the results and/or may predict benefit from inhaled Nitric Oxide in preterm infants. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20331899 PMCID: PMC2860486 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-10-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
MAPPiNO Collaboration: citations for eligible trials as at October 2009
| Trial identifier | Main citation |
|---|---|
| Ballard 2006 | Ballard RA, Truog WE, Cnaan A, et al. Inhaled Nitric Oxide in preterm infants undergoing mechanical ventilation. |
| Dani 2006 | Dani C, Bertini G, Pezzati M, et al. Inhaled Nitric Oxide in very preterm infants with severe respiratory distress syndrome. |
| Hascoet 2005 | Hascoet JM, Fresson J, Claris O, et al. The safety and efficacy of Nitric Oxide therapy in premature infants. |
| INNOVO 2005 | INNOVO. Neonatal ventilation with inhaled Nitric Oxide versus ventilatory support without inhaled Nitric Oxide for preterm infants with severe respiratory failure: the INNOVO multicentre randomized controlled trial. |
| Kinsella 1999 | Kinsella JP. Inhaled Nitric Oxide in premature neonates with severe hypoxaemic respiratory failure: a randomised controlled trial. |
| Kinsella 2006 | Kinsella JP, Cutter GR, Walsh WF, et al. Early inhaled Nitric Oxide therapy in premature newborns with respiratory failure. |
| Mercier 1999 | Mercier JC, Thebaud B, Onody P. Early compared with delayed inhaled Nitric Oxide in moderately hypoxaemic neonates with respiratory failure: a randomised controlled trial. |
| Schreiber 2003 | Schreiber MD, Gin-Mestan K, Marks JD, et al. Inhaled Nitric Oxide in Premature Infants with the Respiratory Distress Syndrome. |
| Mestan KKL, Marks JD, Hecox K, et al. Neurodevelopmental Outcomes of Premature Infants Treated with Inhaled Nitric Oxide. | |
| Srisuparp 2002 | Srisuparp P, Heitschmidt M, Schreiber MD. Inhaled Nitric Oxide therapy in premature infants with mild to moderate respiratory distress syndrome. |
| Su 2008 | Su PH, Chen JY. Inhaled Nitric Oxide in the management of preterm infants with severe respiratory failure. |
| Subhedar 1997 | Subhedar NV, Ryan SW, Shaw NJ. Open randomised controlled trial of inhaled Nitric Oxide and early dexamethasone in high risk preterm infants. |
| Subhedar NV, Shaw NJ. Changes in oxygenation and pulmonary haemodynamics in preterm infants treated with inhaled Nitric Oxide. | |
| Van Meurs 2005 | Van Meurs KP, Wright LL, Ehrenkranz RA, et al. Inhaled Nitric Oxide for Premature Infants with Severe Respiratory Failure. |
| EUNO 2008 (completed RCT awaiting publication) | JC Mercier, H. Hummler, X Durrmeyer, et al. The effects of inhaled Nitric Oxide on the development of bronchopulmonary dysplasia in preterm infants: the 'EUNO' multicentre randomised clinical trial. Abstract: |
MAPPiNO Collaboration: description of eligible trials as at October 2009
| Study | Participants | Intervention | Primary outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ballard 2006 | 582 infants <1250 g and <32 wks on assisted ventilation at 7-21 days (or, if <800 g, on CPAP) | Inhaled NO at 20 ppm initial dose for 48 to 96 hours, then dose subsequently decreased to 10, 5, and 2 ppm at weekly intervals, with a minimum treatment duration of 24 days | Survival without BPD at 36 wks postmenstrual age |
| Dani 2006 | 40 infants <30 wks ventilated with severe RDS: FiO2 >0.5 and arterial-alveolar oxygen ratio < 0.15 despite surfactant treatment | Inhaled NO at 10 ppm for 4 hours followed by 6 ppm. Weaning (decrease by 2 ppm every 3 hrs) started at 72 hrs or when the infant was extubated or when the FiO2 <0.3 with a mean airway pressure <8 cmH2O | Death or BPD (oxygen requirement at 36 weeks postconceptional age) in survivors |
| Hascoet 2005 | 860 infants <32 wk enrolled at birth; n = 145 infants were eligible for study gas as had hypoxic respiratory failure (defined as need for mechanical ventilation, FiO2>0.40 and arterio-alveolar O2 ratio <0.22) at 6-48 hrs age | Inhaled NO was administered starting at 5 ppm, with adjustments allowed depending on response up to a maximum of 10 ppm. | Intact survival at 28 days (defined as alive without need for oxygen supplementation or IVH >grade 1 or refractory hypoxaemia (need for 100% oxygen with PaO2<50 mmHg) and PCO2 <50 mmHg) |
| INNOVO 2005 | 108 preterm infants (<34 wks) less than 28 days of age with severe respiratory failure requiring ventilator support and have had surfactant when appropriate | Inhaled NO usually at 5 ppm, up to 40 ppm based on response criteria (satisfactory response: increase in PaO2 >22.5 mmHg after 15 minutes iNO) | 1) Death or severe disability at 1 year corrected age; and |
| Kinsella 1999 | 80 preterm infants (</= 34 weeks) aged 7 days or less, with a/A ratio <0.1 on two sequential arterial blood measurements despite mechanical ventilation and surfactant treatment | Inhaled NO at 5 ppm for 7 days after which periods of no study gas were tried; threshold criteria for gas re-start was an increase of >/=15% in OI; maximum treatment duration was 14 days | Survival to discharge |
| Kinsella 2006 | 793 preterm infants < 34 wks, with respiratory failure needing assisted ventilation in first 48 hours of life | Inhaled NO at 5 ppm for 21 days or until extubation | Death or BPD (need for supplemental oxygen or mechanical ventilation at 36 wks pma and abnormal CXR) |
| Schreiber 2003 | 207 infants < 34 wks and < 2000 g birth weight, < 72 hours of age, and intubated/ventilated for RDS, having had exogenous surfactant | Inhaled NO starting at 10 ppm for 12-24 hrs, then 5 ppm for 6 days, then weaned by 1 ppm every 6 hrs if PaO2 did not decrease by more than 15% until extubation; 2 × 2 factorial trial of iNO vs control gas and HFOV vs CMV | Death or CLD (supplemental oxygen and CXR showing persistent parenchymal lung disease at 36 weeks pma) among surviving infants |
| Srisuparp 2002 | 34 infants < 2000 g, ventilated after surfactant with an arterial catheter and less than 72 hours of age + satisfying severity of illness criterion: OI >4 if birthweight<1000 g; >6 if 1001-1250 g; >8 if 1251-1500 g; >10 if 1501-1750 g; and >12 if 1751-2000 g birthweight | Inhaled NO at 20 ppm for 6-12 hrs, then reduced to 10 ppm, and weaned to 5 ppm in the next 12 hrs; weaning tolerated if PaO2did not decrease by more than 15%; once 5 ppm achieved, weaning was attempted at 1 ppm a time as tolerated until gas discontinued; maximum duration allowed was 7 days | Severe intraventricular hemorrhage (grade 3 or 4) |
| Subhedar 1997 | 42 preterm infants, < 32 wks, assessed at 96 hrs age for: mechanical ventilation since birth, had received surfactant, and high risk of developing CLD using a modified prediction score | Inhaled Nitric Oxide at 20 ppm for 2 hrs then weaned according to response criteria (positive response: decrease in OI by >=25% or reduction in FiO2 of >=0.10) by 5 ppm increments every 15 mins until 5 ppm level for further 72 hrs, then weaned off; 2 × 2 factorial trial of iNO vs control and IV dexamethasone vs control | Death before discharge or CLD (oxygen dependency for at least 28 days and beyond 36 wks pma with abnormal CXR) |
| Van Meurs 2005 | 420 preterm infants, < 34 weeks, 401-1500 g birthweight, assisted ventilation, OI >=10 on two consecutive blood gases 30 min -12 hrs apart at least 4 hrs after surfactant | Inhaled Nitric Oxide initially at 5-10 ppm; weaning commenced 10-14 hrs after initiation according to response criteria (change in PaO2); at 30 min intervals; maximum duration was 336 hours | Death or BPD at 36 wks in survivors |
| EUNO 2008 | 800 preterm infants <29 wks, birthweight >=500 g requiring either surfactant or CPAP >4 cmH2O with FiO2 >0.3 to maintain SpO2 ≥ 85% | Inhaled NO 5 ppm for minimum 7 to maximum of 21 days if still requiring respiratory support (including CPAP use) | Survival without BPD at 36 wks post conceptional age |
a/A: arterial/alveolar oxygen ratio
BPD: bronchopulmonary dysplasia
CLD: chronic lung disease
CMV: continuous mechanical ventilation
CPAP: continuous positive airway pressure
CXR: chest X ray
FiO2: fraction of inspired oxygen
g: grams
HFOV: high-frequency oscillatory ventilation
hrs: hours
iNO: inhaled Nitric Oxide
OI: oxygenation index
pma: postmenstrual age
ppm: parts per million
RDS: respiratory distress syndrome
SpO2: oxygen saturation
wks: weeks