Vaneet K Kalra1, Henry C Lee2, Lillian Sie2, Anura W Ratnasiri3, Mark A Underwood4, Satyan Lakshminrusimha4. 1. Department of Pediatrics, UC Davis Health System, Sacramento, CA, USA. vkkalra@ucdavis.edu. 2. Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA. 3. Department of Cardiovascular medicine, UC Davis Health System, Sacramento, CA, USA. 4. Department of Pediatrics, UC Davis Health System, Sacramento, CA, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe trends in the incidence and severity of meconium aspiration syndrome (MAS) around the release of revised Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) guidelines in 2016. STUDY DESIGN: The California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative database was queried for years 2013-2017 to describe the incidence and outcomes of infants with MAS. Results were analyzed based on both individual years and pre- vs. post-guideline epochs (2013-15 vs. 2017). RESULT: Incidence of MAS decreased significantly from 2013-15 to 2017 (1.02 to 0.78/1000 births, p < 0.001). Among infants with MAS, delivery room intubations decreased from 2013-15 to 2017 (44.3 vs. 35.1%; p = 0.005), but similar proportion of infants required invasive respiratory support (80.1 vs. 80.8%), inhaled nitric oxide (28.8 vs. 28.4%) or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (0.81 vs. 0.35%). CONCLUSION: While the study design precludes confirmation of implementation of the recent NRP recommendation, there was no increase in the incidence or severity of MAS following its release.
OBJECTIVE: To describe trends in the incidence and severity of meconium aspiration syndrome (MAS) around the release of revised Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) guidelines in 2016. STUDY DESIGN: The California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative database was queried for years 2013-2017 to describe the incidence and outcomes of infants with MAS. Results were analyzed based on both individual years and pre- vs. post-guideline epochs (2013-15 vs. 2017). RESULT: Incidence of MAS decreased significantly from 2013-15 to 2017 (1.02 to 0.78/1000 births, p < 0.001). Among infants with MAS, delivery room intubations decreased from 2013-15 to 2017 (44.3 vs. 35.1%; p = 0.005), but similar proportion of infants required invasive respiratory support (80.1 vs. 80.8%), inhaled nitric oxide (28.8 vs. 28.4%) or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (0.81 vs. 0.35%). CONCLUSION: While the study design precludes confirmation of implementation of the recent NRP recommendation, there was no increase in the incidence or severity of MAS following its release.
Authors: John Madar; Charles C Roehr; Sean Ainsworth; Hege Ersda; Colin Morley; Mario Rüdiger; Christiane Skåre; Tomasz Szczapa; Arjan Te Pas; Daniele Trevisanuto; Berndt Urlesberger; Dominic Wilkinson; Jonathan P Wyllie Journal: Notf Rett Med Date: 2021-06-02 Impact factor: 0.892
Authors: Chiara Monfredini; Francesco Cavallin; Paolo Ernesto Villani; Giuseppe Paterlini; Benedetta Allais; Daniele Trevisanuto Journal: Children (Basel) Date: 2021-03-17