OBJECTIVE: To examine whether a change in the approach to managing persistent patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) from early ligation to selective ligation is associated with an increased risk of abnormal neurodevelopmental outcomes. STUDY DESIGN: In 2005, we changed our PDA treatment protocol for infants born at ≤27 6/7 weeks' gestation from an early ligation approach, with prompt PDA ligation if the ductus failed to close after indomethacin therapy (period 1: January 1999 to December 2004), to a selective ligation approach, with PDA ligation performed only if specific criteria were met (period 2: January 2005 to May 2009). All infants in both periods received prophylactic indomethacin. Multivariate analysis was used to compare the odds of a composite abnormal neurodevelopmental outcome (Bayley Mental Developmental Index or Cognitive Score <70, cerebral palsy, blindness, and/or deafness) associated with each treatment approach at age 18-36 months (n = 224). RESULTS: During period 1, 23% of the infants in follow-up failed indomethacin treatment, and all underwent surgical ligation. During period 2, 30% of infants failed indomethacin, and 66% underwent ligation after meeting prespecified criteria. Infants treated with the selective ligation strategy demonstrated fewer abnormal outcomes than those treated with the early ligation approach (OR, 0.07; P = .046). Infants who underwent ligation before 10 days of age had an increased incidence of abnormal neurodevelopmental outcome. The significant difference in outcomes between the 2 PDA treatment strategies could be accounted for in part by the earlier age of ligation during period 1. CONCLUSION: A selective ligation approach for PDAs that fail to close with indomethacin therapy is not associated with worse neurodevelopmental outcomes at age 18-36 months.
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether a change in the approach to managing persistent patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) from early ligation to selective ligation is associated with an increased risk of abnormal neurodevelopmental outcomes. STUDY DESIGN: In 2005, we changed our PDA treatment protocol for infants born at ≤27 6/7 weeks' gestation from an early ligation approach, with prompt PDA ligation if the ductus failed to close after indomethacin therapy (period 1: January 1999 to December 2004), to a selective ligation approach, with PDA ligation performed only if specific criteria were met (period 2: January 2005 to May 2009). All infants in both periods received prophylactic indomethacin. Multivariate analysis was used to compare the odds of a composite abnormal neurodevelopmental outcome (Bayley Mental Developmental Index or Cognitive Score <70, cerebral palsy, blindness, and/or deafness) associated with each treatment approach at age 18-36 months (n = 224). RESULTS: During period 1, 23% of the infants in follow-up failed indomethacin treatment, and all underwent surgical ligation. During period 2, 30% of infants failed indomethacin, and 66% underwent ligation after meeting prespecified criteria. Infants treated with the selective ligation strategy demonstrated fewer abnormal outcomes than those treated with the early ligation approach (OR, 0.07; P = .046). Infants who underwent ligation before 10 days of age had an increased incidence of abnormal neurodevelopmental outcome. The significant difference in outcomes between the 2 PDA treatment strategies could be accounted for in part by the earlier age of ligation during period 1. CONCLUSION: A selective ligation approach for PDAs that fail to close with indomethacin therapy is not associated with worse neurodevelopmental outcomes at age 18-36 months.
Authors: Dany E Weisz; Lucia Mirea; Erin Rosenberg; Maximus Jang; Linh Ly; Paige T Church; Edmond Kelly; S Joseph Kim; Amish Jain; Patrick J McNamara; Prakesh S Shah Journal: JAMA Pediatr Date: 2017-05-01 Impact factor: 16.193
Authors: A Rodríguez Ogando; I Planelles Asensio; A Rodríguez Sánchez de la Blanca; F Ballesteros Tejerizo; M Sánchez Luna; J M Gil Jaurena; C Medrano López; J L Zunzunegui Martínez Journal: Pediatr Cardiol Date: 2017-11-08 Impact factor: 1.655
Authors: Shannon E G Hamrick; Hannes Sallmon; Allison T Rose; Diego Porras; Elaine L Shelton; Jeff Reese; Georg Hansmann Journal: Pediatrics Date: 2020-11 Impact factor: 7.124
Authors: Ronald I Clyman; Melissa Liebowitz; Joseph Kaempf; Omer Erdeve; Ali Bulbul; Stellan Håkansson; Johanna Lindqvist; Aijaz Farooqi; Anup Katheria; Jason Sauberan; Jaideep Singh; Kelly Nelson; Andrea Wickremasinghe; Lawrence Dong; Denise C Hassinger; Susan W Aucott; Madoka Hayashi; Anne Marie Heuchan; William A Carey; Matthew Derrick; Erika Fernandez; Meera Sankar; Tina Leone; Jorge Perez; Arturo Serize Journal: J Pediatr Date: 2018-10-16 Impact factor: 4.406