| Literature DB >> 29691250 |
Flavia Maria Wehrle1,2,3, Ulrike Held4, Ruth Tuura O'Gorman2,5, Vera Disselhoff1,2, Barbara Schnider1,2, Jean-Claude Fauchère6, Petra Hüppi7, Beatrice Latal2,3, Cornelia Franziska Hagmann1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Premature infants are particularly vulnerable to brain injuries with associated cognitive and behavioural deficits. The worldwide first randomised interventional multicentre trial investigating the neuroprotective effects of erythropoietin (entitled 'Does erythropoietin improve outcome in very preterm infants?' (NCT00413946)) included 450 very preterm infants in Switzerland. MRI at term equivalent age showed less white matter (WM) injury in the erythropoietin group compared with the placebo group. Despite these promising imaging findings, neurodevelopmental outcome at 2 years showed no beneficial effect of early erythropoietin. One explanation could be that the assessment of more complex cognitive functions such as executive functions (EFs) is only possible at a later age. We hypothesise that due to improved WM development and fewer WM injuries, children born preterm treated with early erythropoietin will have better EF abilities at 7-12 years than those treated with placebo. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: 365 children who were included into the primary analysis of the original trial (NCT00413946) will be eligible in this prospective follow-up study at the age of 7-12 years. 185 children born at term will be control children. Primary outcome measures are EF abilities and processing speed, while secondary outcomes are academic performance, IQ, fine motor abilities and global brain connectivity. A comprehensive test battery will be applied to assess EFs. MRI will be performed to assess global brain connectivity. Cognitive scores and MRI measures will be compared between both groups using the Wilcoxon test. Propensity score matching will be used to balance gender, age, socioeconomic status and other potentially unbalanced variables between the children born preterm and the healthy control children. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The cantonal ethical committee granted ethical approval for this study (KEK 2017-00521). Written consent will be obtained from the parents. Findings from this study will be disseminated via international and national conference presentations and publications in peer-reviewed journals. © 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: executive function; neuroimaging; neuroprotection; preterm birth
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29691250 PMCID: PMC5922511 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Executive function abilities and processing speed
| Assessed abilities | Applied assessment tools |
| Inhibition and interference | Stop-Signal Task (stop-signal reaction time) |
| Working memory | Digit Span forward/backward (WISC-IV) |
| Cognitive flexibility | Trail Making Task (D-KEFS) |
| Planning | Tower Task (D-KEFS) |
| Fluency | Verbal Fluency (RWT) |
| Executive functions in everyday life | Parent rating (BRIEF questionnaire) |
| Processing speed | Coding, Symbol Search (both WISC-IV) |
Study-specific test battery to assess executive functions and processing speed.
BRIEF, Behaviour Rating Inventory of Executive Functions; D-KEFS, Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System; RWT, Regensburger Verbal Fluency Test (Regensburger Wortflüssigkeitstest); TAP, Test Battery for Attention Testing (Testbatterie zur Aufmerksamkeitsprüfung); WISC-IV, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children Fourth Edition.
List of applied questionnaires
| Assessed domains and subdomains | Questionnaire | Completed by* |
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| Information on health and academic outcome | Detailed information on schooling, health concerns and leisure activities | Parents |
| Behavioural screening: emotional symptoms, conduct problems, hyperactivity/inattention, peer relationship problems, prosocial behaviour | Strength and Difficulty Questionnaire | Parents |
| Autistic traits screening | Social and Communication Disorder Checklist | Parents |
| Health-related quality of life: physical, psychological well-being, autonomy and parent relation, peers and social support, school environment | Kidscreen-27 | Parents and children |
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| Executive function abilities relevant for everyday life: inhibit, shift, emotional control, self-monitor, initiate, working memory, plan/organise, task monitor and organisation of materials | Behaviour Rating Inventory of Executive Functions-Adult version | Parents |
| Physical and mental health: vitality, physical functioning, bodily pain, general health perceptions, physical role functioning, emotional role functioning, social role functioning, mental health | Short Form Health Survey | Parents |
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| Family socioeconomic status | Detailed information on for example, parental age, nationality, marital status, first language, maternal and paternal education and occupation, current living arrangements and financial situation | Parents |
| Quality of family environment: family cohesion, expressiveness, conflict | Family Relationship Index | Parents |
| Perceived social support for the family | Social Support Questionnaire (F-SozU-14) | Parents |
| Parenting: positive parenting behaviour, involvement, (poor) monitoring, inconsistent discipline, authoritarian parenting, responsible parenting, corporal punishment | German version of the Alabama parenting Questionnaire for elementary school children (DEAPQ-EL-GS) | Parents |
| Quality of parent–child interaction: cohesion, identification, autonomy, conflicts, rejection/neglect, punishment, emotional burden, fears/overprotection, aid | Parental-Representation-Screening-Questionnaire (Elternbild-Fragebogen, EBF-KJ) | Children |
| Critical life events | 12-item list of critical life events | Parents |
*Questionnaires are completed by at least one parent.