| Literature DB >> 29662925 |
Giancarlo Mari1, Zoran Bursac1, Patricia Jean Goedecke1, Ramasubbareddy Dhanireddy1.
Abstract
Objective. The objective of this study was to determine factors contributing to improvements in infant mortality rates (IMR) and composite morbidity-mortality in very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) infants after initiating a new perinatal program in 2009 at Regional One Health (ROH). VLBW infants account for 67% of infant deaths. Design. This is a pre-/postintervention cohort study of prospectively gathered data. Population. VLBW infants delivered at ROH during the 2004 to 2015 study period. Setting. ROH is a Regional Perinatal Center affiliated with the University of Tennessee Health Science Center. Methods. We studied 2364 consecutive VLBW infants. Multivariate models were applied to determine factors contributing significantly to the reduction in the outcome measures as well as trends over time. Main Outcome Measures. Primary outcomes were IMR and composite morbidity-mortality rates. Standardized, risk-adjusted mortality and composite morbidity ratios were also reported as defined by the Vermont Oxford Network. Results. Mortality declined from 15.5% in Pre-Implementation to 13.1% in Post-Implementation (P = .093), corresponding to an 18% reduction in odds. The combined factors of composite morbidity-mortality rate decreased from 55.7% in Pre-Implementation to 43.9% in Post-Implementation (P < .0001), representing a 38% reduction in odds. Standardized, risk-adjusted mortality and composite morbidity ratios improved during the study period from 20% above to 20% below the expected rate. Increases in the administration of antenatal steroids, surfactant administration, cesarean delivery, and perhaps other programmatic changes that were observational and unaccounted in the model were associated with improvements in outcome measures. Conclusions. Decreased mortality and composite morbidity-mortality in VLBW infants delivered at ROH were found following the initiation of a new perinatal program.Entities:
Keywords: cesarean; morbidity; mortality; neonatal; perinatal; steroids; surfactant
Year: 2018 PMID: 29662925 PMCID: PMC5894905 DOI: 10.1177/2333794X18765366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Pediatr Health ISSN: 2333-794X
Shelby County and Regional Medical Center, Regional One Health (ROH) Data.
| Year | Deliveries ROH | Deliveries Shelby | Deliveries ROH/Shelby % | VLBW ROH | VLBW ROH % | VLBW Shelby | VLBW Shelby % | VLBW ROH/Shelby % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | 4548 | 14 252 | 31.9% | 213 | 4.8% | 364 | 2.6% | 72% |
| 2005 | 4401 | 14 481 | 30.4% | 243 | 5.5% | 409 | 2.8% | 71% |
| 2006 | 5047 | 15 171 | 33.3% | 237 | 4.7% | 387 | 2.6% | 75% |
| 2007 | 5097 | 15 237 | 33.5% | 229 | 4.5% | 391 | 2.6% | 67% |
| 2008 | 5040 | 15 051 | 33.5% | 202 | 4.0% | 358 | 2.4% | 66% |
| 2009 | 4466 | 14 409 | 31.0% | 216 | 4.8% | 385 | 2.7% | 66% |
| 2010 | 4196 | 13 781 | 30.4% | 170 | 4.0% | 311 | 2.3% | 63% |
| 2011 | 3794 | 13 993 | 27.1% | 176 | 4.6% | 290 | 2.1% | 70% |
| 2012 | 3991 | 13 898 | 28.7% | 201 | 5.0% | 343 | 2.5% | 67% |
| 2013 | 3953 | 13 760 | 28.7% | 173 | 4.4% | 358 | 2.6% | 54% |
| 2014 | 4035 | 13 842 | 29.2% | 133 | 3.3% | 288 | 2.1% | 49% |
| 2015 | 3730 | 13 377 | 27.9% | 169 | 4.5% | 309 | 2.3% | 60% |
Abbreviation: VLBW, very low birth weight.
Changes Made at Regional One Health (ROH) After 2008.
| ● Daily communication between the directors of maternal-fetal medicine (MFM) and neonatology |
| ● Well-defined expectations for all health care personnel on labor & delivery (L&D) |
| ● Development of protocols |
| ● MFM constant presence on L&D |
| ● Neonatologist assigned to L&D |
| ● Second obstetric attending assigned to L&D |
| ● Patient safety nurse |
| ● Mandatory fetal heart rate monitoring course for all L&D personnel |
| ● Mandatory simulation training for all L&D personnel (Obstetric Feasible Approach Safety Training [OB-FAST]) |
| ● Fetal heart rate monitoring present in all L&D areas |
| ● Continue visual assessment of the fetal heart rate tracing for all patients in L&D |
| ● Establishment of morning report sign out system, where all obstetrical patients are discussed with faculty, residents, nurses, and students. |
| ● Ten reviews (or as needed) every 24 hours of the L&D patients among the different teams involved on L&D |
| ● Didactics conferences for all residents held weekly from 7 |
| ● Multidisciplinary conferences: |
| ○ Neonatal-Perinatal Conference |
| ○ Fetal Center Conference |
| ○ Neonatology-Obstetric Morbidity and Mortality Conference |
| ● Peer review of all complications |
| ● Surfactant administration in the delivery room |
| ● Steroid administered as soon as a patient at risk for preterm delivery (PTD) admitted to L&D |
| ● Warmer temperature settings in the operating room/delivery room |
Main Characteristics of the Study Population.
| Parameters | Pre-Implementation 2004 to 2008 | % or Mean ± SD | Post-Implementation 2009 to 2015 | % or Mean ± SD |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple gestations VLBW (500-1500 g) | 230 | 20.5% | 273 | 22.0% | NS |
| Maternal Race | |||||
| African American | 922 | 82.0% | 1039 | 83.9% | NS |
| White | 146 | 13.0% | 148 | 12.0% | NS |
| Other | 56 | 5.0% | 53 | 4.1% | NS |
| Hispanic ethnicity | 50 | 4.5% | 45 | 3.6% | NS |
| Gender: Males | 553 | 49.2% | 614 | 49.5% | NS |
| Prenatal care (one or more visits) | 972 | 86.6% | 1105 | 89.2% | NS |
| C-section | 699 | 62.2% | 861 | 69.4% | .0002 |
| Gestational age at delivery (mean and SD) | 29.3 | ±3.2 | 28.0 | ± 3.1 | .0001 |
| Birth weight, g (mean and SD) | 1015 | ±290 | 1020 | ±295 | NS |
| Admission axillary temperature <36°C | 359 | 55.2% | 141 | 11.8% | .0001 |
| Length of stay, days (mean and SD) | 43.3 | ±27.6 | 48.9 | ±31.2 | .0001 |
| Surfactant administration delivery room | 201 | 17.9% | 608 | 49.0% | .0001 |
| Antenatal steroids | 856 | 76.2% | 1105 | 89.1% | .0001 |
Abbreviations: VLBW, Very low birth weight; NS, Not significant.
Note: *Hispanic ethnicity is a separate variable from maternal race and it includes individuals of any race **Denominator includes 650 available observations because this measurement was not collected from 2004 to 2005
Figure 1.(a) Cesarean deliveries, percentages by year, 2004 to 2015. (b) Low temperature at admissions, less than 36°C; percentages by year, 2006 to 2015. (c) Antenatal steroid use, percentages by year, 2004 to 2015. (d) Surfactant administration in the delivery room, percentages by year, 2004 to 2015.
Unadjusted Infant Mortality and Composite Neonatal Outcome (Morbidity + Mortality) rates and odds ratios.
| 2004 to 2008, n = 1124 | 2009 to 2015, n = 1240 | OR, 95% CI, | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infant mortality, n (%) | 174 (15.5) | 162 (13.1) | OR = 0.82, 0.65-1.03, .0933 |
| Morbidity and mortality, n (%) | 626 (55.7) | 544 (43.9) | OR = 0.62, 0.53-0.73, <.0001 |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 2.Comparison of composite infant morbidity-mortality rates of subsequent years to that in 2004, with confidence intervals. Odds ratios below 1 indicate reduction in odds of infant morbidity-mortality.
Figure 3.Standard risk adjusted for mortality and composite morbidity ratio (SMR). The dots represent the mean; the bars represent the 95% confidence interval. The number 1 represents the expected mortality and composite morbidity as determined by the Vermont Oxford Network (VON) for our center. The SMR is calculated using a 3-year average.
Figure 4.Multivariate logistic regression model showing the association between the covariates of interest and infant mortality over time, with 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 5.Multivariate logistic regression model showing the association between the covariates of interest and composite infant morbidity-mortality over time, with 95% confidence intervals.