| Literature DB >> 36183143 |
Ronny Knol1,2, Emma Brouwer3, Thomas van den Akker4,5, Philip L J DeKoninck6,7, Enrico Lopriore3, Wes Onland8, Marijn J Vermeulen9, M Elske van den Akker-van Marle10, Leti van Bodegom-Vos10, Willem P de Boode11, Anton H van Kaam8, Irwin K M Reiss9, Graeme R Polglase7, G Jeroen Hutten8, Sandra A Prins8, Estelle E M Mulder12, Christian V Hulzebos13, Sam J van Sambeeck14, Mayke E van der Putten15, Inge A Zonnenberg16, Stuart B Hooper7, Arjan B Te Pas3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: International guidelines recommend delayed umbilical cord clamping (DCC) up to 1 min in preterm infants, unless the condition of the infant requires immediate resuscitation. However, clamping the cord prior to lung aeration may severely limit circulatory adaptation resulting in a reduction in cardiac output and hypoxia. Delaying cord clamping until lung aeration and ventilation have been established (physiological-based cord clamping, PBCC) allows for an adequately established pulmonary circulation and results in a more stable circulatory transition. The decline in cardiac output following time-based delayed cord clamping (TBCC) may thus be avoided. We hypothesise that PBCC, compared to TBCC, results in a more stable transition in very preterm infants, leading to improved clinical outcomes. The primary objective is to compare the effect of PBCC on intact survival with TBCC.Entities:
Keywords: Cord clamping; Physiological-based cord clamping; Preterm infants; Randomised clinical trial; Study protocol
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36183143 PMCID: PMC9526936 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-022-06789-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.728
Fig. 1The Concord, a purpose-built resuscitation trolley developed at Leiden University Medical Centre (LUMC)
Fig. 2The physiological-based cord clamping procedure using the Concord, applied in the intervention group. Stabilisation of the infant is performed while the cord is intact and the cord is clamped only after the infant is stabilised
Fig. 3The standard time-based cord clamping procedure, applied in the control group. Cord clamping is performed immediately or delayed for 30–60 s and stabilisation of the infant is performed after the cord is clamped using a standard resuscitation table
Fig. 4Timeline schedule of eligibility screening, consent, enrolment, allocation, intervention and assessments at all time points. CA corrected age
Fig. 5Flow chart illustrating the randomisation plan showing expected numbers needed to include 330 participants in each arm