| Literature DB >> 31600248 |
Juliana Wendling Gotardo1, Nathalia de Freitas Valle Volkmer2, Guilherme Pucci Stangler3, Alícia Dorneles Dornelles2, Betânia Barreto de Athayde Bohrer2, Clarissa Gutierrez Carvalho2.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Whether all degrees of periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) and peri-intraventricular haemorrhage (PIVH) have a negative impact on neurodevelopment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31600248 PMCID: PMC6786801 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart of study selection.
Articles used in meta-analysis, sorted by outcomes with reasons for exclusion.
| Outcome | Description of inclusion or exclusion in meta-analysis |
|---|---|
CP, cerebral palsy; MDI, mental development index; PDI, psychomotor development index.
Results and characteristics of studies.
| Author and | Study population | Imaging and exposure | Follow-up | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catto-Smith [ | n = 31. GA between 23–28 weeks. Australia, 1981. | US: PIVH. | 2 years corrected age. | Bayley: 3 children had MDI <50 (1 with IVH, 1 with ICH and 1 without PIVH). |
| Ment [ | n = 142. BW ≤1250 g. USA, June 1979 –June 1982. | CT and US: PIVH. | 12, 18 and 30 months corrected age. | Blindness: 2 cases (one with and one without PIVH). |
| Szymonowicz [ | n = 32. BW ≤1250 g. Australia, 1982. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 2 years corrected age. | Bayley: 3 infants had MDI <50 (1 with IVH, 2 with GLH+PVL). |
| Graham [ | n = 156. BW ≤1500 g. UK, January 1984 –April 1985. | US: PVL and PIVH. | 18 months corrected age. | Griffiths’ Median DQ: 108 with no US abnormality; 107 with any degree of PIVH; 109 with prolonged flare. |
| Salomon [ | n = 88. BW ≤1000 g. USA, January 1980 –June 1983. | US: PIVH. | 1, 2 and 3 years chronological age. | Mild handicap: 21% with normal US; 27% with abnormal US. |
| Nwaesei [ | n = 110. GA ≤32 weeks. Canada, July 1984 –June 1985. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 12 months corrected age. | Mild Handicap: 20 cases. |
| Bennett [ | n = 48. BW ≤1500 g or GA ≤32 weeks. USA, January 1983 –June 1984. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 12–24 months corrected age. | Neurodevelopmental major abnormality (PIVH): 13% with no PIVH, 30% with PIVH Papile grade 1–2 and 44% with Papile 3–4. |
| Beverley [ | n = 62. GA ≤35 weeks. UK. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 3, 6, 12 and 18 months corrected age. | Developmental delay: 7 cases (4 normal US, 1 cerebral atrophy, 1 Papile 3+PVL, 1 Papile 4). |
| Van de Bor [ | n = 31. GA ≤32 weeks. Netherlands. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 3 years of age. | Minor Handicap: 3 cases (1 mental retardation, 1 minor neurological dysfunction and 1 with both), all with PIVH grade 3. |
| Fazzi [ | n = 122. BW ≤1500 g. Italy, January 1983 –December 1987. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 12 months corrected age. | Minor sequelae: 10 cases (4 normal US, 2 uncomplicated PIVH, 3 complicated PIVH, 1 PVL). |
| Ikonen [ | n = 101. GA <33 weeks. Finland, May 1984 –May 1987. | US: PVL. | 2 years of age. | Mental retardation: 7 cases, all with PVL. |
| Van de Bor [ | n = 304. GA <32 weeks or BW <1500g. Netherlands, 1983. | US: PIVH. | 5 years of age. | Neurological disability: 21 cases (13 no PIVH, 5 PIVH Papile grade 1–2 and 3 Papile 3–4). |
| Roth [ | n = 206. GA <33 weeks. UK, 1979–1982. | US: PIVH. | 8 years of age. | Major neuromotor impairment: 13 cases (3 normal US, 1 uncomplicated PIVH, 2 ventricular dilatation, 1 hydrocephalus, 6 cerebral atrophy). |
| Aziz [ | n = 646. BW <1250 g. Canada, 1987–1990. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 2 to 3 years of age. | Mental retardation: 15% of children with normal US; 24% of those with PIVH and 28% of those with cystic PVL. |
| Fawer [ | n = 295. GA ≤34 weeks. Switzerland, April 1982 –September 1986. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 5 years of age. | Isolated visual impairment: 29% of children with small focal PVL. |
| Vohr [ | n = 440. BW between 600–1250 g. USA, September 1985 –August 1992. | US: PIVH. | 36 months corrected age. | Study compared early-onset PIVH and not early-onset PIVH. No data comparing US with PIVH versus normal scan. |
| Sherlock [ | n = 270. BW <1000 g or GA <28 weeks. Australia, January 1991 –December 1992. | US: PIVH. | 8 years of age. | Neurosensory impairment: 28 cases with normal US, 5 cases with PIVH Papile grade 1, 5 cases with grade 2, 1 with grade 3, 6 with grade 4. |
| Dyet [ | n = 119. GA <30 weeks. UK, January 1997 –November 2000. | US and MRI: PIVH, PVL, diffuse excessive high signal intensity (DEHSI). | 18 to 36 months corrected age. | Griffiths’ DQ (mean ±SD): No DEHSI 111±20; DEHSI 94±11.6; severe DEHSI 92±7.5; p = 0.23. PIVH and Punctate PVL did not predict lower DQ. |
| Vollmer [ | n = 567. GA <33 weeks. UK, 1979 and 1991. | US: PIVH. | 8 years of age. | WISC-R Full-scale intelligence quotient (mean ±SD): Normal US 101 ±17 and PIVH with ventricular dilatation 96±23. |
| Locatelli [ | n = 195. GA 24–32 weeks. Italy, January 1999 –December 2006. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 24 months of age. | Adverse neurodevelopmental outcome (ANDO) defined as CP or neurodevelopmental delay. |
| Van Wezel-Meijler [ | n = 130. GA <32 weeks. Netherlands, May 2006 –October 2007. | US and MRI: PIVH and PVL. | 2 years of age. | PIVH and abnormal ventricle size or shape predicted outcomes at 2 years of age (positive predictive value 34 and 31%, respectively; negative predictive value 94%). |
| Klebermass- | n = 151. GA <32 weeks. Austria, 1994–2005. | US: PIVH. | 1, 2, 3 and 5 years of age. | Bayley II MDI <70 at 1 year: 9.7% of infants without PIVH, 7.6% PIVH Papile 1, 25.7% PIVH grade 2. |
| Payne [ | n = 1472. GA <27 weeks. USA, January 2006 –December 2008. | US: PIVH. | 18–22 months corrected age. | Bayley III Cognitive score <70: 7% of infants without PIVH, 7% PIVH Papile 1 and 2 and 15% PIVH 3 and 4 (p value <0.01). |
| Hintz [ | n = 386. GA <28 weeks. USA, February 2005 –February 2009. | US: PIVH and PVL. | 6 years and 4 months to 7 years and 2 months. | Bayley III Cognitive score < 70: 8% of infants without white matter abnormality (WMA), 11% in mild WMA, 12% in moderate WMA and 60% in severe WMA (p < 0.001). |
BW, birth weight; CT, computed tomography; DQ, development quotient; GLH, germinal layer haemorrhage; ICH, intracerebral haemorrhage; IQ, intelligence quotient; IVH, intraventricular haemorrhage; MDI, mental development index; PDI, psychomotor development index; SD, standard deviation; UK, United Kingdom; US, ultrasound; USA, United States of America; WMA, White matter abnormality.
Fig 2Absolute mean difference of mental development index between children with no or grade 1 peri-intraventricular haemorrhage (PIVH) and children with higher degrees of PIVH.
Fig 3Absolute mean difference of psychomotor development index between children with no or grade 1 peri-intraventricular haemorrhage (PIVH) and children with higher degrees of PIVH.
Fig 4Risk ratio of cerebral palsy comparing children with any peri-intraventricular haemorrhage (PIVH) and those without PIVH.
Fig 5Subgroup analysis of cerebral palsy comparing children with any Peri-Intraventricular Haemorrhage (PIVH) and those without PIVH, by birth weight (BW).
Results for meta-analysis of periventricular leukomalacia for the outcome of cerebral palsy.
| Results of meta-analysis of cerebral palsy and periventricular leukomalacia | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1 | Group 2 | No. Of studies | No of subjects | Pooled RR [95% CI] | p-value | I2 (%) |
| Any PVL | No PVL | 2 [4,14] | 802 | 10.63 [1.9–59.5] | <0.001 | 0 |
| Cystic PVL | No PVL | 2 [4,14] | 749 | 19.35 [6.5–46.5] | <0.001 | 72 |
| Non-cystic PVL | No PVL | 2 [4,14] | 782 | 9.08 [5.1–16.1] | <0.001 | 0 |
CI, confidence interval; PVL, periventricular leukomalacia; Ref, reference number; RR, Risk Ratio.