Literature DB >> 29180541

Neonatal brain injuries in England: population-based incidence derived from routinely recorded clinical data held in the National Neonatal Research Database.

Chris Gale1, Yevgeniy Statnikov2, Sena Jawad1, Sabita N Uthaya1, Neena Modi1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In 2015, the Department of Health in England announced an ambition to reduce 'brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth'. We describe the development of a pragmatic case definition and present annual incidence rates.
DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study using data held in the National Neonatal Research Database (NNRD) extracted from neonatal electronic patient records from all National Health Service (NHS) neonatal units in England, Wales and Scotland. In 2010-2011, population coverage in the NNRD was incomplete, hence rate estimates are presented as a range; from 2012, population coverage is complete, and rates (95% CIs) are presented. Rates are per 1000 live births.
SETTING: NHS neonatal units in England. PATIENTS: Infants admitted for neonatal care; denominator: live births in England. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: 'Brain injuries occurring at or soon after birth' defined as infants with seizures, hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy, stroke, intracranial haemorrhage, central nervous system infection and kernicterus and preterm infants with cystic periventricular leucomalacia.
RESULTS: In 2010, the lower estimate of the rate of 'Brain injuries occurring at or soon after birth' in England was 4.53 and the upper estimate was 5.19; in 2015, the rate was 5.14 (4.97, 5.32). For preterm infants, the population incidence in 2015 was 25.88 (24.51, 27.33) and 3.47 (3.33, 3.62) for term infants. Hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy was the largest contributor to term brain injury, and intraventricular/periventricular haemorrhage was the largest contributor to preterm brain injury.
CONCLUSIONS: Annual incidence rates for brain injuries can be estimated from data held in the NNRD; rates for individual conditions are consistent with published rates. Routinely recorded clinical data can be used for national surveillance, offering efficiencies over traditional approaches. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

Entities:  

Keywords:  brain injuries; electronic health records; infant, newborn; intensive care, neonatal; nnrd

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29180541      PMCID: PMC6047140          DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2017-313707

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed        ISSN: 1359-2998            Impact factor:   5.747


Conditions that lead to brain injury around the time of birth are leading causes of mortality and morbidity. Reducing ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ in England is part of a wider national maternity ambition driven by the Department of Health. There are limited population data on the incidence of many of the conditions that lead to brain injury around the time of birth. An expert working group has constructed a pragmatic, working definition for ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’. Annual population incidence data for conditions leading to neonatal brain injury can be estimated from routinely recorded data held in the National Neonatal Research Database (NNRD). Annual population incidence rates in England for conditions leading to neonatal brain injury, calculated using data from the NNRD, are in agreement with limited published rates from other developed healthcare settings.

Introduction

Conditions that lead to brain injury around the time of birth,1 such as hypoxia-ischaemia, stroke and intracranial haemorrhage, are leading causes of neonatal mortality2 and life-long morbidities including some forms of cerebral palsy.3 In November 2015, the UK Secretary of State for Health announced a national ambition to reduce ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ by 20% by 2020 and halve them by 2030. This was part of a wider national maternity ambition to similarly reduce stillbirths and maternal and neonatal deaths.4 The Department of Health commissioned the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit at Imperial College London to estimate annual figures for ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ from routinely recorded clinical data held in the National Neonatal Research Database (NNRD). The NNRD, a national resource, was chosen by the Department of Health, because it is the only data source that met the requirements for coverage, including estimation of retrospective rates and trends over time, frequent reporting and ability to identify brain injury without need for information in childhood. Here we describe the development of a working definition for ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ and report national incidence rates for England over the period 2010–2015. We also report national incidence rates for individual conditions included in the working definition.

Methods

Defining brain injuries occurring at or soon after birth

Unlike stillbirth or neonatal death, the term ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ does not have an agreed or standardised definition. An expert group was therefore convened by the Department of Health to determine a working definition for the national maternity ambition. The group met at Richmond House, London, on 17 January 2017; experts in neonatal and perinatal brain injury, health professionals and representatives of government and other National Health Service (NHS) organisations were invited. Attendees and their affiliations are listed in online supplementary data 1. The remit of the expert group was to reach consensus on a pragmatic working definition for ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ and describe the following components of such a definition: scope (including the gestational age of infants and the timing of injury), conditions to be included, data items to be included and the denominator to be used to calculate incidence. The final working definition for ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ agreed by the expert group for the purposes of the national maternity ambition is described in box; the corresponding NNRD data items can be found in online supplementary data 2. The definition represents a pragmatic approach to identifying infants likely to have sustained brain injury, using signs of acute neurological dysfunction and conditions known to be causally related. Brain injuries occurring at or soon after birth: final working definition for the Department of Health national maternity ambition. Population: all neonatal unit admissions. Time period after birth: all brain injuries detected during neonatal unit stay. Conditions to be included: seizures: all infants intracranial haemorrhage, perinatal stroke, hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy, central nervous system infection, kernicterus (bilirubin encephalopathy): all infants white matter disease (periventricular leukomalacia): preterm infants only. Denominator: all live births. Exclusions: congenital encephalopathies (including inborn errors of metabolism), congenital infections and congenital brain abnormalities: a consensus decision was made to present data before and after exclusion of infants with seizures, who also had a diagnosis of a condition indicating that brain injury had occurred prior to birth. The data items within the National Neonatal Research Database that constitute the final working definition of ‘brain injuries occurring at or soon after birth’ can be found in online supplementary data 2.

Data sources

Case (numerator) data were extracted from the NNRD. The NNRD is a clinical dataset (The National Neonatal Data Set) within the NHS Data Dictionary. Details of all data items are searchable at the following web page: http://www.datadictionary.nhs.uk/data_dictionary/messages/clinical_data_sets/data_sets/national_neonatal_data_set/national_neonatal_data_set_-_episodic_and_daily_care_fr.asp?shownav=1. In the UK, summary electronic patient data are entered on all admissions to NHS neonatal units in England, Wales and Scotland. Approximately 450 predefined data items that form the National Neonatal Data Set, an approved NHS Information Standard,5 are extracted at regular intervals from the real-time electronic platform and held in a unique national resource,5 the NNRD. Data in the NNRD have undergone detailed cleaning to identify, for example, duplicates, out of range values, internal inconsistencies and other potentially erroneous entries. In addition to these internal processes, feedback quality assurance checks are undertaken with clinicians for key items. Data in the NNRD are merged across multiple patient episodes to create a single record for each infant.6 The NNRD holds data from approximately 90% of English NHS neonatal units from 2010 and from 100% of English NHS neonatal units from 2012 onwards. The NNRD only holds data on infants admitted for neonatal care; no data are held on infants in the neonatal period who are receiving care on postnatal or paediatric wards. The specific National Neonatal Data Set items used to define ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ for the national maternity ambition are described in online supplementary data 2. Denominator data, total live births in England, were obtained from the Office for National Statistics (ONS),7 as were total live births by gestational age.8 9 To calculate national rates of ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’, infants were categorised as a case of ‘brain injury’ if they were recorded as having any of the conditions described in box; therefore, an infant with both seizures and cystic periventricular leucomalacia was counted once. When calculating rates for the individual conditions included in ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’, infants were categorised for each condition separately; therefore, an infant with both seizures and cystic periventricular leukomalacia was counted as a case for both conditions.

Statistical methods

For the period 2012–2015, when the NNRD had population coverage for neonatal admissions in England, brain injury data are presented as absolute counts and rates with 95% CIs. In 2010 and 2011, approximately 90% of NHS neonatal units in England contributed data to the NNRD; to account for missing data, national rates of brain injuries in England for 2010 and 2011 were estimated. These rates are hence more uncertain than rates reported for subsequent years. The Department of Health required rates to be estimated from 2010 to allow reporting of ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ alongside other measures included in the national maternity ambition, namely stillbirths, maternal deaths and neonatal deaths. In 2010 and 2011, the NNRD held data from contributing neonatal units and data on total births in England (from ONS), but the number of infants admitted to neonatal units that did not contribute to the NNRD and the number of total live births in maternity units attached to these non-contributing neonatal units were not known. To account for this, admissions for 2010 and 2011 were estimated using data on annual neonatal unit admissions from 2012 to 2015, when the NNRD had complete coverage of neonatal units in England. There was an upward trend in the number of neonatal unit admissions from 2012 to 2015, suggesting that the admissions in 2010 and 2011 would have been lower than the later years. Lower and upper inflations in the number of admissions were estimated based on the most extreme yearly increases seen in 2012–2015, assuming that the admissions in 2010 and 2011 would be as, or less, extreme than these. The SD of the proportion of brain injuries to admissions was estimated using actual data from the NNRD; the number of brain injuries on the lower increase in admissions was inflated by two SD less than the actual brain injury rate for the lower estimate and by an increase in two SD more than the actual brain injury for the upper estimate. This method gave more of an overestimate for the upper estimate than the lower estimate. Inflated rates for brain injuries were then calculated by taking the lower and higher estimates of brain injuries as a proportion of the total number of live births, under the assumption that the brain injury rate among the missing infants would not differ from the calculated rate. Rates of brain injuries for 2010 and 2011 are presented as ranges that reflect these lower and higher calculated estimates. For all years, rates were stratified by gestational age with preterm infants defined as those born at <37 weeks and term infants those born at ≥37 weeks.

Results

The number of infants admitted to neonatal units contributing data to the NNRD increased from 64 375 in 2010 to 88 785 in 2015; the annual rate of brain injuries after exclusions in England in 2010 was between 4.53 and 5.19 per 1000 live births; in 2015, the rate was 5.14 (95% CI 4.97 to 5.32) per 1000 live births (table 1); annual data for 2010–2015 are presented table 1.
Table 1

Infants in England (all gestational ages) with a diagnosis of brain injury, before and after exclusion of conditions leading to brain injury prior to birth

YearInfants recorded in the NNRDLive births in EnglandInfants with brain injury, before exclusionsExclusionsInfants with brain injury, after exclusionsInfants with brain injury adjusted for incomplete NNRD coverageInfants with brain injury adjusted for incomplete NNRD coverage, after exclusionsRate of brain injuries per 1000 live birthsBrain injuries per 1000 live births, after exclusions (95% CI)
201064 375687 00730114529663160 to 36193113 to 35664.60 to 5.274.53 to 5.19
201172 678688 12033774633313434 to 36303387 to 35814.99 to 5.284.93 to 5.20
201278 952694 2413404453359Not adjustedNot adjusted4.90 (4.47 to 5.07)4.84 (4.68 to 5.00)
201380 199664 5173393353358Not adjustedNot adjusted5.11 (4.94 to 5.28)5.05 (4.89 to 5.23)
201484 981661 4963558303528Not adjustedNot adjusted5.38 (5.20 to 5.56)5.33 (5.16 to 5.51)
201588 785664 3993445273418Not adjustedNot adjusted5.19 (5.01 to 5.36)5.14 (4.97 to 5.32)

Data for 2010 and 2011 are adjusted to account for the incomplete coverage of the NNRD during those years; from 2012 onwards, the NNRD has complete population coverage of neonatal admissions in England so no adjustment was necessary, and data are presented as a rate (95% CI).

NNRD, National Neonatal Research Database.

Infants in England (all gestational ages) with a diagnosis of brain injury, before and after exclusion of conditions leading to brain injury prior to birth Data for 2010 and 2011 are adjusted to account for the incomplete coverage of the NNRD during those years; from 2012 onwards, the NNRD has complete population coverage of neonatal admissions in England so no adjustment was necessary, and data are presented as a rate (95% CI). NNRD, National Neonatal Research Database. The annual rate of brain injuries among term infants (≥37 gestational weeks) in England in 2015 was 3.47 (95% CI 3.33 to 3.62) per 1000 live term births; data for term infants born over the period 2010–2015 are presented in table 2. The annual rate of brain injuries among preterm infants (<37 gestational weeks) in England in 2015 was 25.88 (95% CI 24.51 to 27.33) per 1000 live preterm births; data for preterm infants between 2010 and 2015 can be found in table 3.
Table 2

Term (≥37 gestational weeks) infants in England with a diagnosis of brain injury, before and after exclusion of conditions leading to brain injury prior to birth

YearTerm infants recorded in the NNRDTerm live births in EnglandTerm infants with brain injury, before exclusionsTerm infants with brain injury adjusted for incomplete NNRD coverageTerm infants with brain injury, after adjustment and exclusionsRate of brain injuries per 1000 term live births, after exclusions (95% CI)
201035 415627 35718301979 to 22181949 to 21863.11 to 3.48
201141 429630 41921262213 to 22852179 to 22493.46 to 3.57
201246 200640 7872109Not adjusted20743.24 (3.10 to 3.38)
201347 935612 8162130Not adjusted21053.43 (3.29 to 3.58)
201451 945607 9722215Not adjusted21893.60 (3.45 to 3.75)
201555 045609 0762136Not adjusted21163.47 (3.33 to 3.62)

Data for 2010 and 2011 are adjusted to account for the incomplete coverage of the NNRD during these years; from 2012 onwards, the NNRD has complete population coverage of neonatal admissions in England so no adjustment was necessary, and data are presented as a rate (95% CI).

NNRD, National Neonatal Research Database.

Table 3

Preterm (<37 gestational weeks) infants in England with a diagnosis of brain injury, before and after exclusion of conditions leading to brain injury prior to birth

YearPreterm infants recorded in the NNRDPreterm live births in EnglandPreterm infants with brain injury, before exclusionsPreterm infants with brain injury adjusted for incomplete NNRD coveragePreterm infants with brain injury after adjustment and exclusionsRate of brain injuries per 1000 preterm live births, after exclusions (95% CI)
201028 96043 92811811273 to 13101254 to 129028.54 to 29.37
201131 24944 54712511281 to 12981268 to 128428.47 to 28.83
201232 75249 9491295Not adjusted128525.73 (24.36 to 27.17)
201332 26448 8441263Not adjusted125325.65 (24.27 to 27.11)
201433 03649 3791343Not adjusted133927.12 (25.70 to 28.61)
201533 74050 3081309Not adjusted130225.88 (24.51 to 27.33)

Data for 2010 and 2011 are adjusted to account for the incomplete coverage of the NNRD during these years; from 2012 onwards, the NNRD has complete population coverage of neonatal admissions in England so no adjustment was necessary, and data are presented as a rate (95% CI).

NNRD, National Neonatal Research Database.

Term (≥37 gestational weeks) infants in England with a diagnosis of brain injury, before and after exclusion of conditions leading to brain injury prior to birth Data for 2010 and 2011 are adjusted to account for the incomplete coverage of the NNRD during these years; from 2012 onwards, the NNRD has complete population coverage of neonatal admissions in England so no adjustment was necessary, and data are presented as a rate (95% CI). NNRD, National Neonatal Research Database. Preterm (<37 gestational weeks) infants in England with a diagnosis of brain injury, before and after exclusion of conditions leading to brain injury prior to birth Data for 2010 and 2011 are adjusted to account for the incomplete coverage of the NNRD during these years; from 2012 onwards, the NNRD has complete population coverage of neonatal admissions in England so no adjustment was necessary, and data are presented as a rate (95% CI). NNRD, National Neonatal Research Database. The consensus opinion was that the following individual conditions make up the working definition of ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’: neonatal seizures, intracranial haemorrhage (including intraventricular/periventricular haemorrhage), perinatal/neonatal stroke, hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE), central nervous system infection, bilirubin encephalopathy and, among preterm infants only, cystic periventricular leukomalacia. Annual numbers and population rates for these conditions calculated from NNRD data are presented in table 4. Data are from 2012 onwards when all NHS neonatal units contributed to the NNRD.
Table 4

Infants in England with conditions leading to brain injury at or soon after birth

ConditionYear
2012201320142015
SeizuresNumber of cases1445143213601249
Rate per 1000 live births (95% CI)2.1 (2.0 to 2.1)2.2 (2.1 to 2.3)2.1 (2.0 to 2.2)1.9 (1.8 to 2.0)
Number of term cases106510361009919
Number of preterm cases378396351330
Intracranial haemorrhageNumber of cases754677689726
Rate per 1000 live births (95% CI)1.1 (1.0 to 1.2)1.0 (0.9 to 1.1)1.0 (1.0 to 1.1)1.1 (1.0 to 1.2)
Number of term cases11094104117
Rate per 10 000 term births (95% CI)1.7 (1.4 to 2.1)1.5 (1.3 to 1.9)1.7 (1.4 to 2.1)1.9 (1.6 to 2.3)
Number of preterm cases644583585609
Severe P/IVH <32 weeks gestation483445468452
Rate of severe P/IVH per 1000 live births <32 weeks (95% CI)60.4 (55.2 to 66.0)57.7 (52.6 to 63.4)61.1 (55.8 to 66.9)58.3 (53.1 to 63.9)
Perinatal/neonatal strokeNumber of cases771008890
Rate per 1000 live births (95% CI)0.11 (0.09 to 0.14)0.15 (0.12 to 0.18)0.13 (0.11 to 0.16)0.14 (0.11 to 0.17)
Number of term cases64787276
Number of preterm cases13221614
Hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathyNumber of cases1674167418241742
Rate per 1000 live births (95% CI)2.4 (2.3 to 2.5)2.5 (2.4 to 2.6)2.8 (2.6 to 2.9)2.6 (2.5 to 2.8)
Number of term cases1409140114801417
Number of preterm cases265273344325
Central nervous system infectionNumber of cases353422504465
Rate per 1000 live births (95% CI)0.51 (0.46 to 0.56)0.64 (0.58 to 0.70)0.76 (0.70 to 0.83)0.70 (0.64 to 0.77)
Number of term cases188266284277
Number of preterm cases165156220188
Bilirubin encephalopathyNumber of cases8724
Rate per 100 000 live births (95% CI)1.2 (0.6 to 2.3)1.1 (0.5 to 2.2)0.3 (0.1 to 1.2)0.6 (0.2 to 1.6)
Number of term cases6524
Number of preterm cases2200
Cystic periventricular leucomalaciaNumber of preterm cases199175171184
Rate per 1000 live births (95% CI)0.3 (0.3 to 0.3)0.3 (0.2 to 0.3)0.3 (0.2 to 0.3)0.3 (0.2 to 0.3)
Number of cases at <34 weeks gestation186175157176
Rate per 1000 live births <34 weeks gestation (95% CI)12.7 (11.0 to 14.7)12.5 (10.7 to 14.4)11.3 (9.7 to 13.3)12.4 (10.7 to 14.4)

Infants can be diagnosed with more than one condition so the sum of conditions for each year will not match data given in tables 1–3; P/IVH, periventricular/intraventricular haemorrhage.

Infants in England with conditions leading to brain injury at or soon after birth Infants can be diagnosed with more than one condition so the sum of conditions for each year will not match data given in tables 1–3; P/IVH, periventricular/intraventricular haemorrhage.

Discussion

We present national incidence rates for ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ based on pragmatic definitions, agreed on by a multidisciplinary expert group, from data held in the NNRD relating to infants admitted to neonatal units in England. To our knowledge, this work is unique in describing and calculating a summary measure of conditions leading to perinatal and neonatal brain injury at a national population level. We demonstrate that the national incidence of ‘brain injuries occurring during or soon after birth’ in England has remained relatively consistent over the period 2010 to 2015. This analysis was commissioned by the Department of Health in England as part of the National Maternity Ambition, which aims to reduce maternal and neonatal deaths, stillbirths and brain injuries. The longitudinal assessment of the incidence of brain injuries, using standardised definitions and without the burden of additional data collection, should facilitate benchmarking, quality improvement and research aiming to reduce these conditions and the associated life-long medical and neurocognitive burdens. To our best knowledge, this is the largest and most complete attempt to define population incidence figures for neonatal and perinatal brain injuries. A strength of our study was the consistent application of a predefined case definition across a globally unique population-level repository of point-of-care clinician-entered patient data—the NNRD. As there is no agreed or established definition for ‘brain injuries that occur at or soon after birth’, and as brain injury in infants can manifest in diverse ways and have many causes,1 an expert panel was convened to establish a pragmatic working definition. The definition agreed represents a compromise between two requirements set by the Department of Health: first, to capture infants with perinatal or neonatal brain injury reliably and completely, and second, to use existing data and report rates retrospectively back to 2010. As a result, the definition includes both signs of acute neurological dysfunction, seizures, and conditions, such as HIE, that are markers of potential brain injury rather than definitive evidence that such injury has occurred. Clear evidence of injury often only emerges as the child grows older, hence an accurate measure would require complete long-term follow-up and assessment in childhood. A further limitation is that data were only available from infants admitted for neonatal care, therefore any infants managed on postnatal or paediatric wards would not be captured. However, such instances are likely to be few in number. It is also important to acknowledge that diagnostic certainty at the point of data entry varies between conditions; neonatal seizures and the reasons for them can be difficult to diagnose in the neonatal period, and this may result in underestimation of the rate for this condition. The clinical experience of medical staff completing the summary electronic patient record may vary between neonatal units, which may impact data quality, particularly in 2010–2011, when the system was being introduced to new neonatal units. We endeavoured to make clear the limitations inherent in the data, specifically the assumptions required to estimate national rates for 2010 and 2011. The novelty of the measure ‘brain injuries that occur at or soon after birth’, and the source of the data, the NNRD which is formed from routinely recorded clinical information, makes it necessary to consider how incidence rates of individual conditions we report compare with other published data. The annual incidence rates for moderate and severe HIE of between 2.4 and 2.8 per 1000 live births are consistent with other reported rates of neonatal encephalopathy of between 0.77 and 3.8 per 1000 live births in low neonatal mortality regions, such as the UK and the USA.10 When considering neonatal intracranial haemorrhage, published data commonly reported incidence separately for term and preterm infants. A 30-year-old, single-centre study from the USA reported a regional incidence of 2.7 per 10 000 live births for symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage in term infants,11 which is comparable with the population incidence of 1.5–1.9 per 10 000 term births that we report. For preterm infants born at 22–31 weeks gestational age, comparable population-level incidence data for intraventricular/periventricular haemorrhage from the national French EPIPAGE cohort are 3.8% for grade 3% and 3.3% for grade 4 intra/periventricular haemorrhage.12 In the same gestational age band, we report annual incidence rates between 5.8% and 6.1% for a composite including grades 3 and 4 intraventricular/periventricular haemorrhage. We report annual incidence rates for neonatal or perinatal stroke of between 0.11 and 0.15 per 1000 live births, which is similar to the estimated minimum incidence rate of 0.10 per 1000 live births reported by a prospective, population-based study from Canada.13 The annual incidence of neonatal central nervous system infection we report, of 0.51–0.76 per 1000 live births, is similarly in agreement with the population-level incidence rate for neonatal meningitis in England and Wales of 0.39 per 1000 live births (1996–1997) reported by the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit (BPSU).14 Similarly, annual rates of bilirubin encephalopathy reported here of between 0.3 and 1.2 per 100 000 live births are comparable with BPSU population surveillance rates of 0.9 per 1 00 000 live births (2003–2005).15 EPIPAGE 2 (2011) reports an incidence among 23–34 gestational week infants of 1.8% for cystic periventricular leukomalacia16; in the same gestational age group, we report annual rates of between 1.13% and 1.27%. Finally, population-based studies of neonatal seizures over the last 30 years report incidence rates between 1.817 and 3.518 per 1000 live births, results that are again in keeping with our annual rates of 1.9–2.2 per 1000 live births. In conclusion, we provide national estimates for ‘brain injuries occurring at or soon after birth’ for England over the period 2010–2015 using data held in a national database derived from point-of-care, clinician professional-entered electronic patient records. Our estimates are in broad agreement with other published population-based rates from stand-alone studies conducted in similar neonatal care settings, using data recorded specifically for each study. This supports the validity of using data held in the NNRD for initiatives such as the Department of Health national maternity ambition. This approach is cost and time efficient, less burdensome for health professionals and represents a positive evolution away from the former approach of bespoke duplicative data collections for each specific purpose.
  14 in total

1.  Survival and morbidity of preterm children born at 22 through 34 weeks' gestation in France in 2011: results of the EPIPAGE-2 cohort study.

Authors:  Pierre-Yves Ancel; François Goffinet; Pierre Kuhn; Bruno Langer; Jacqueline Matis; Xavier Hernandorena; Pierre Chabanier; Laurence Joly-Pedespan; Bénédicte Lecomte; Françoise Vendittelli; Michel Dreyfus; Bernard Guillois; Antoine Burguet; Pierre Sagot; Jacques Sizun; Alain Beuchée; Florence Rouget; Amélie Favreau; Elie Saliba; Nathalie Bednarek; Patrice Morville; Gérard Thiriez; Loïc Marpeau; Stéphane Marret; Gilles Kayem; Xavier Durrmeyer; Michèle Granier; Olivier Baud; Pierre-Henri Jarreau; Delphine Mitanchez; Pascal Boileau; Pierre Boulot; Gilles Cambonie; Hubert Daudé; Antoine Bédu; Fabienne Mons; Jeanne Fresson; Rachel Vieux; Corine Alberge; Catherine Alberge; Catherine Arnaud; Christophe Vayssière; Patrick Truffert; Véronique Pierrat; Damien Subtil; Claude D'Ercole; Catherine Gire; Umberto Simeoni; André Bongain; Loïc Sentilhes; Jean-Christophe Rozé; Jean Gondry; André Leke; Michel Deiber; Olivier Claris; Jean-Charles Picaud; Anne Ego; Thierry Debillon; Anne Poulichet; Eliane Coliné; Anne Favre; Olivier Fléchelles; Sylvain Samperiz; Duksha Ramful; Bernard Branger; Valérie Benhammou; Laurence Foix-L'Hélias; Laetitia Marchand-Martin; Monique Kaminski
Journal:  JAMA Pediatr       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 16.193

2.  Neonatal meningitis in England and Wales: 10 years on.

Authors:  D E Holt; S Halket; J de Louvois; D Harvey
Journal:  Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 5.747

3.  Cerebral palsy in a term population: risk factors and neuroimaging findings.

Authors:  Yvonne W Wu; Lisa A Croen; Sameer J Shah; Thomas B Newman; Daniel V Najjar
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 7.124

4.  Leading causes of preterm delivery as risk factors for intraventricular hemorrhage in very preterm infants: results of the EPIPAGE 2 cohort study.

Authors:  Marie Chevallier; Thierry Debillon; Veronique Pierrat; Pierre Delorme; Gilles Kayem; Mélanie Durox; François Goffinet; Stephane Marret; Pierre Yves Ancel
Journal:  Am J Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2017-01-16       Impact factor: 8.661

5.  Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage in full-term infants.

Authors:  W C Hanigan; F C Powell; T C Miller; R M Wright
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  1995-12       Impact factor: 1.475

6.  Incidence of neonatal seizures in Harris County, Texas, 1992-1994.

Authors:  R M Saliba; J F Annegers; D K Waller; J E Tyson; E M Mizrahi
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  1999-10-01       Impact factor: 4.897

7.  Prospective surveillance study of severe hyperbilirubinaemia in the newborn in the UK and Ireland.

Authors:  Donal Manning; Peter Todd; Melanie Maxwell; Mary Jane Platt
Journal:  Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed       Date:  2006-10-30       Impact factor: 5.747

Review 8.  A systematic review of administrative and clinical databases of infants admitted to neonatal units.

Authors:  Yevgeniy Statnikov; Buthaina Ibrahim; Neena Modi
Journal:  Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed       Date:  2017-01-13       Impact factor: 5.747

9.  The UK National Neonatal Research Database: using neonatal data for research, quality improvement and more.

Authors:  C Gale; I Morris
Journal:  Arch Dis Child Educ Pract Ed       Date:  2016-03-11       Impact factor: 1.309

10.  Global, regional, and national causes of under-5 mortality in 2000-15: an updated systematic analysis with implications for the Sustainable Development Goals.

Authors:  Li Liu; Shefali Oza; Dan Hogan; Yue Chu; Jamie Perin; Jun Zhu; Joy E Lawn; Simon Cousens; Colin Mathers; Robert E Black
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2016-11-11       Impact factor: 79.321

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  33 in total

Review 1.  Information technology infrastructure, quality improvement and research: the UK National Neonatal Research Database.

Authors:  Neena Modi
Journal:  Transl Pediatr       Date:  2019-07

Review 2.  Artificial Intelligence in Obstetrics and Gynaecology: Is This the Way Forward?

Authors:  Sonji Clarke; Michail Sideris; Elif Iliria Emin; Ece Emin; Apostolos Papalois; Fredric Willmott
Journal:  In Vivo       Date:  2019 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.155

3.  Time and sex dependent effects of magnesium sulphate on post-asphyxial seizures in preterm fetal sheep.

Authors:  Laura Bennet; Robert Galinsky; Vittoria Draghi; Christopher A Lear; Joanne O Davidson; Charles P Unsworth; Alistair J Gunn
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2018-04-16       Impact factor: 5.182

4.  Mesenchymal stem cell therapy in perinatal arterial ischemic stroke: systematic review of preclinical studies.

Authors:  Verena Lehnerer; Anna Roidl; Olga Romantsik; Raphael Guzman; Sven Wellmann; Matteo Bruschettini
Journal:  Pediatr Res       Date:  2022-07-29       Impact factor: 3.953

Review 5.  The fetus at the tipping point: modifying the outcome of fetal asphyxia.

Authors:  Simerdeep K Dhillon; Christopher A Lear; Robert Galinsky; Guido Wassink; Joanne O Davidson; Sandra Juul; Nicola J Robertson; Alistair J Gunn; Laura Bennet
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2018-06-21       Impact factor: 5.182

6.  Human umbilical cord mesenchymal stromal cells as an adjunct therapy with therapeutic hypothermia in a piglet model of perinatal asphyxia.

Authors:  Nicola J Robertson; Christopher Meehan; Kathryn A Martinello; Adnan Avdic-Belltheus; Tiziana Boggini; Tatenda Mutshiya; Ingran Lingam; Qin Yang; Magdalena Sokolska; Xenia Charalambous; Alan Bainbridge; Mariya Hristova; Boris W Kramer; Xavier Golay; Ben Weil; Mark W Lowdell
Journal:  Cytotherapy       Date:  2020-11-28       Impact factor: 5.414

7.  Development and Validation of a Dynamic Nomogram to Predict the Risk of Neonatal White Matter Damage.

Authors:  Wenjun Cao; Chenghan Luo; Mengyuan Lei; Min Shen; Wenqian Ding; Mengmeng Wang; Min Song; Jian Ge; Qian Zhang
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2021-02-23       Impact factor: 3.169

Review 8.  Preventing Brain Injury in the Preterm Infant-Current Controversies and Potential Therapies.

Authors:  Nathanael Yates; Alistair J Gunn; Laura Bennet; Simerdeep K Dhillon; Joanne O Davidson
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-02-07       Impact factor: 5.923

9.  Validity of SyMRI for Assessment of the Neonatal Brain.

Authors:  Victor Schmidbauer; Gudrun Geisl; Mariana Cardoso Diogo; Suren Jengojan; Vsevolod Perepelov; Michael Weber; Katharina Goeral; Florian Lindenlaub; Katrin Klebermass-Schrehof; Angelika Berger; Daniela Prayer; Gregor Kasprian
Journal:  Clin Neuroradiol       Date:  2020-03-11       Impact factor: 3.649

10.  Investigation of EEG Activity Compared with Mean Arterial Blood Pressure in Extremely Preterm Infants.

Authors:  Sujith S Pereira; Stephen T Kempley; David F Wertheim; Ajay K Sinha; Joan K Morris; Divyen K Shah
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2018-02-26       Impact factor: 4.003

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