| Literature DB >> 24049745 |
Vinod K Bhutani1, Ronald J Wong.
Abstract
Hemolytic conditions in preterm neonates, including Rhesus (Rh) disease, can lead to mortality and long-term impairments due to bilirubin neurotoxicity. Universal access to Rh immunoprophylaxis, coordinated perinatal-neonatal care, and effective phototherapy has virtually eliminated the risk of kernicterus in many countries. In the absence of jaundice due to isoimmunization and without access to phototherapy or exchange transfusion (in 1955), kernicterus was reported at 10.1%, 5.5%, and 1.2% in babies <30, 31-32, and 33-34 wks gestational age, respectively. Phototherapy initiated at 24±12 hr effectively prevented hyperbilirubinemia in infants <2,000 g even in the presence of hemolysis. This approach (in 1985) reduced exchange transfusions from 23.9% to 4.8%. Now with 3 decades of experience in implementing effective phototherapy, the need for exchange transfusions has virtually been eliminated. However, bilirubin neurotoxicity continues to be associated with prematurity alone. The ability to better predict this risk, other than birthweight and gestation, has been elusive. Objective tests such as total bilirubin, unbound or free bilirubin, albumin levels, and albumin-bilirubin binding, together with observations of concurrent hemolysis, sepsis, and rapid rate of bilirubin rise have been considered, but their individual or combined predictive utility has yet to be refined. The disruptive effects of immaturity, concurrent neonatal disease, cholestasis, use of total parenteral nutrition or drugs that alter bilirubin-binding abilities augment the clinical risk of neurotoxicity. Current management options rely on the "fine-tuning" of each infant's exposure to beneficial antioxidants and avoidance of silent neurotoxic properties of bilirubin navigated within the safe spectrum of operational thresholds demarcated by experts.Entities:
Keywords: Bilirubin neurotoxicity; hyperbilirubinemia; jaundice; kernicterus; preterm
Year: 2013 PMID: 24049745 PMCID: PMC3775137 DOI: 10.4103/2249-4847.116402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Neonatol ISSN: 2249-4847
Figure 1Case history
Neonatal mortality with kernicterus among admits to neonatal nursery (by birthweight and gestational age)[5]
Historic clinical risk factors for bilirubin neurotoxicity in preterm neonates[7]
Multi-system signs of acute bilirubin encephalopathy in preterm neonates[8]
Figure 2Kernicterus spectrum disorders in children of preterm birth
Efficacy of phototherapy to prevent exchange transfusion[7]: Outcome of NICHD phototherapy efficacy trial (1985)
Residual long-term impairment in infants with birthweight 1000 to 2000 g treated for severe hyperbilirubinemia and tested at age 7 yrs[24] (Randomized control trial of phototherapy and selective use of exchange transfusion versus exchange transfusion alone[7])
Outcome at age 7 yrs in preterm infants with neonatal jaundice: Percent infants with suspiciously abnormal findings for specific psychometric tests and association with prematurity and disordered bilirubin-albumin binding[12]
Irreversible impairment at age 16-22 months in infants <1,000 g[35]
Concerns for over-treatment with phototherapy in extremely low birthweight infants
Operational thresholds for exchange transfusion in preterm infants[7]
Bilirubin-albumin ratio: Theoretical criteria for exchange transfusion in BW<2000 g
Figure 3Operationalization of phototherapy-based expert recommendations