| Literature DB >> 30696415 |
Ravi Prakash Upadhyay1, Gitismita Naik2, Tarun Shankar Choudhary2, Ranadip Chowdhury2, Sunita Taneja2, Nita Bhandari2, Jose Carlos Martines3, Rajiv Bahl4, Maharaj Kishan Bhan5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: South Asia contributes substantially to global low birth weight population (i.e. those with birth weight < 2500 g). Synthesized evidence is lacking on magnitude of cognitive and motor deficits in low birth weight (LBW) children compared to those with normal birth weight (NBW) (i.e. birth weight ≥ 2500 g). The meta-analysis aimed to generate this essential evidence.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Children; Cognitive score; Low birth weight; Motor score; South Asia
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30696415 PMCID: PMC6350290 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-019-1408-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Search strategy used to identify articles to be included in the systematic review and meta-analysis
| 1. | (Neurodevelopmental OR Neurodevelopment OR Neurobehavioral OR Neurobehavioural OR Cognitive OR Intellectual OR Developmental OR Learning OR Language OR Behaviour OR Behavior OR Motor OR Motor Skill OR Movement OR Intelligence OR Psychomotor OR Psychomotor performance OR Developmental coordination OR Mental OR Memory OR Disability OR Disabilities OR Manifestations OR Disorder OR Dysfunction OR Outcome OR Retardation OR Neuropathology OR Cerebral Palsy OR Attention deficit OR Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder OR school performance OR Child development OR Infant development OR Developmental Delay OR Long term Outcome) |
| 2. | (birthweight OR birth weight) |
| 3. | (#1 AND #2) Filter: Customized country filter (India OR Bangladesh OR Pakistan OR Nepal OR Bhutan OR Sri Lanka OR Maldives OR Afghanistan OR south Asia) |
Fig. 1Flowchart depicting the selection process of the article for the meta-analysis
Details of the studies from south Asia included in the meta-analysis
| Author (year) | Site of recruitment; Type of study | Country | Study population | Sample size | Tool(s) used | Age at assessment | Key outcome(s) | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chaudhari (1999) [ | Hospital; | India | Infants with BW < 2000 g discharged from Neonatal special care units and full term neonates with BW > 2500 g followed up till their 6 years of age | Children with low BW- 201 | Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale (SBIS) | At 6 years of age | Mean IQ score | 6 |
| Tandon (A)(2000) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Infants with BW ≤2000 g discharged from special care nursery and followed up in high risk clinics; controls were healthy term infants with BW > 2500 g followed in well baby clinics | Children with low BW:27 | Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale (SBIS); | Age range of 5 to 9 years; mean age of 7.0 (SD 1.1) years | Mean cognitive score | 2 |
| Tandon (B)(2000) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Infants with BW ≤2000 g discharged from special care nursery and followed up in high risk clinics; controls were healthy term infants with BW > 2500 g followed in well baby clinics | Children with low BW:32 | Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale (SBIS); | Age range of 9 to 13 years; mean age of 10.6 (SD 1.2) years | Mean cognitive score | 2 |
| Chaudhari (2004) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Infants with BW < 2000 g discharged from Neonatal special care units and full term neonates with BW > 2500 g and followed up till their 12 years of age | Adolescents with low BW- 180 | Weschler’s Intelligence Scale; | At 12 years of age | Mean IQ score | 4 |
| Juneja (2005) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Term infants < 2000 g and term infants with normal birth weight (> 2500 g) | Infants with BW < 2000 g-50 | Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID II) | At 18 months | Mean mental development quotient | 2 |
| Taneja (2005) [ | Community; Cross-sectional | India | Children aged 12 to 18 months enrolled in a randomized controlled trial | Children with low BW- 61 | Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID II) | At 12–18 months of age | Mean mental development quotient | 7 |
| Subasinghe (2006) [ | Community; Cross-sectional | Sri Lanka | Preschool children within the age range of 36–54 months | Children with low BW: 12 | Early Screening Inventory for Preschoolers (ESI-P) | 36 to 54 months of age | Mean cognitive score | 3 |
| Nair (2009) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Adolescents with known birth weight, follow up done at 13 years of age | Adolescents with low BW-183 | Raven’s coloured progressive matrices | At 13 years of age | Proportion with low IQ score (≤25th percentile) | 4 |
| Sidhu (2010) [ | Community; Cross-sectional | India | Children aged 2 to 35 months recruited from a urban center | Children with low BW: 57 | Clinical Linguistic Auditory Milestone Scale (CLAMS) | 2–35 months of age; mean age of 14.15 months | Mean Language Quotient (LQ)a | 3 |
| Hoque (2012) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | Bangladesh | Newborns discharged from a special care baby unit and followed till 12 months of age | Infants with low BW: 25 | Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID II) | At 12 months of age | Mean mental score | 4 |
| Khan (2012) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | Pakistan | Neonates discharged from neonatal intensive care unit and followed till 6 months of age | Infants with low BW: 92 | Denver Development Screening Test (DDST II) | At 6 months of age | Proportion with delayed development (development quotient < 60)b | 4 |
| Tofail (2012) [ | Community; Secondary data analysis from a randomized controlled trial | Bangladesh | Live born singletons | Low BW infants- 66 | Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID II) | At 10 months of age | Mean mental index score | 7 |
| Modi (2013) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | VLBW admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit prospectively followed till 1 year of corrected age. A cohort of term, birth weight (≥2500 g) infants born during same period was enrolled for comparison. | VLBW-37 | Developmental Assessment Scale for Indian Infants (DAS II) | At 12 months of age | Mean mental index score | 5 |
| Chaudhari (2013) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Infants with BW < 2000 g discharged from Neonatal special care units and full term neonates with BW > 2500 g and followed up till their 18 years of age | Adolescents with low BW-161 | Raven’s Progressive Matrices | At 18 years of age | Mean IQ scorea | 4 |
| Avan (2014) [ | Community; Cross-sectional | Pakistan | Low birth weight and normal birth weight infants | Low BW infants-86 | Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID II) | Within 3 years of age | Mean psychomotor development index score | 6 |
| Nair (2014) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Infants discharged from Neonatal special care units and followed up with 12 months of age | Infants with low BW- 170 | Developmental Assessment Scale for Indian Infants (DAS II) | At 12 months of age | Mean mental index scorea | 5 |
| Christian (2014) [ | Community; Prospective follow up | Nepal | Children aged 7 to 9 years who were part of an earlier nutrition supplementation trial | Children with low BW-764 | UNIT for general intelligence; | At 7 to 9 years of age (mean age of 8.4 years) | Mean Intelligence score (UNIT) | 8 |
| Chattopadhyay (2015) [ | Hospital; Prospective follow up | India | Newborns discharged from SNCU | Children with low BW- 206 | TDSC | Under 3 years of age | Proportion with developmental delay | 4 |
| Singh (2017) [ | Community; Cross-sectional | India | Children under 2 years of age from an urbanized village | Children with low BW- 43 | Ages and Stages questionnaire, 3rd Edition | Under 2 years of age | Proportion with development delay | 4 |
| Kvestad (2017) [ | Community; Prospective follow up | Nepal | Infants aged 2–12 months enrolled through a cross-sectional survey and followed up till 5 years of age | Children with low BW: 124 | Ages and Stages Questionnaire, 3rd edition | At 5 years of age | Mean cognitive score | 4 |
BW birth weight, LBW low birth weight, VLBW very low birth weight, NBW normal birth weight, IQ intelligence quotient
aSD calculated using imputation method (http://handbook-5-1.cochrane.org/chapter_7/7_7_3_3_obtaining_standard_deviations_from_standard_errors.htm)
bDevelopmental delay was assessed based on the cumulative score of developmental quotient (DQ) for each of the four domains (i.e. gross motor, language, fine motor and personal/social skills) and dividing by 4. A score of < 60 were labelled as “developmentally delayed”. DQ was calculated as, (developmental age/corrected chronological age)*100. Developmental age was established depending on the degree of achievement in each domain; UNIT-Universal Nonverbal Intelligence Test; CO = − cohort; RCT- randomized controlled trial; TDSC- Trivandrum Developmental Screening Chart; DDST- Denver Developmental Screening tool
Fig. 2Overall pooled weighted mean difference (WMD) of cognitive scores from infancy till adolescence in individuals born low birth weight compared to those born with normal birth weight
Fig. 3Pooled weighted mean difference (WMD) in cognitive scores in children aged < 10 years born with low birth weight, compared to their counterparts with normal birth weight
Risk of adverse neuro-developmental outcomes in children < 10 years of age born with low birth weight compared to those born with normal birth weight
| Outcomes | No. of studies | No. of subjects | Age range | Pooled RR (95% CI) | I 2 Statistic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low cognitive scorea | 4 | 584 | < 10 years | 2.69 (1.34, 5.39) | 12.7% |
| Motor impairmentb | 3 | 312 | < 10 years | 3.32 (1.56, 7.06) | 0.0% |
| Developmental delayc | 3 | 693 | ≤3 years | 1.97 (1.41, 2.73) | 69.3% |
aDefined as mental quotient of < 85 or IQ score ≤ 25th percentile
bdefined as either presence of signs of motor dysfunction on clinical examination or motor quotient of < 85
cdefined as developmental quotient of < 60 on developmental screening tools and/or presence of visual/hearing/speech difficulties
Fig. 4Pooled weighted mean difference (WMD) in motor scores in children under-five years of age born low birth weight, compared to those with normal birth weight
Risk of adverse neuro-developmental outcomes in children < 10 years of age born with birth weight < 2000 g compared to those born with normal birth weight (≥2500 g)
| Outcomes | No. of studies | No. of subjects | Age range | Effect size (95% CI) | I 2 Statistic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cognitive score | 4 | 479 | < 10 years | WMD −7.23 (−9.20; −5.26) | 8.7% |
| 3 | 407 | < 10 years | RR 3.59 (1.55; 8.32)a | 0.0% | |
| Motor score | 2 | 152 | < 10 years | WMD −6.45 (−9.64; −3.27) | 0.0% |
| 2 | 135 | < 10 years | RR 3.72 (1.32; 10.54)b | 0.0% |
aRepresents the risk of having “low cognitive performance” defined as mental quotient of < 85 or IQ score ≤ 25th percentile
bDenotes the risk of having “low motor performance” defined as either presence of signs of motor dysfunction on clinical examination or motor quotient of < 85
Fig. 5Begg’s graph to examine evidence of publication bias for primary outcomes. a WMD for cognitive score in children aged < 10 yrs.; b WMD for motor score in children aged < 10 yrs.