Literature DB >> 8090164

Surfactant therapy and nasal continuous positive airway pressure for newborns with respiratory distress syndrome. Danish-Swedish Multicenter Study Group.

H Verder1, B Robertson, G Greisen, F Ebbesen, P Albertsen, K Lundstrøm, T Jacobsen.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In southern Scandinavia most babies with respiratory distress syndrome are initially treated with nasal continuous positive airway pressure. We performed a multicenter trial to investigate whether the addition of a single dose of porcine surfactant administered during a short intubation before the occurrence of serious deterioration could reduce the subsequent need for mechanical ventilation.
METHODS: We randomly assigned 35 infants with moderate-to-severe respiratory distress syndrome to surfactant therapy (Curosurf, 200 mg per kilogram of body weight) plus nasal continuous positive airway pressure and 33 infants to nasal continuous positive airway pressure alone. The study was not blinded. The indications for mechanical ventilation were a ratio of arterial to alveolar oxygen tension of less than 0.15, severe apneic attacks, or both.
RESULTS: Six hours after randomization, when the median age of the babies was 18 hours, the mean ratio of arterial to alveolar oxygen tension was 0.37 in the surfactant-treated babies, as compared with 0.25 in the controls (P < 0.001). The need for subsequent mechanical ventilation was reduced with surfactant therapy (to 43 percent of the surfactant-treated babies as compared with 85 percent of the controls; P = 0.003). When 17 infants with ratios of arterial-to-alveolar oxygen tension of less than 0.15 at randomization were excluded, the need for mechanical ventilation was still significantly reduced in the surfactant-treated group (to 33 percent [9 of 27 babies], as compared with 83 percent [20 of 24 babies] in the control group; (P < 0.001). After 28 days, two of the surfactant-treated babies had died, as compared with five of the control babies.
CONCLUSIONS: In babies with moderate-to-severe respiratory distress syndrome treated with nasal continuous positive airway pressure, a single dose of surfactant reduced the need for subsequent mechanical ventilation.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8090164     DOI: 10.1056/NEJM199410203311603

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Engl J Med        ISSN: 0028-4793            Impact factor:   91.245


  70 in total

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Review 8.  Current perspectives on the prevention and management of chronic lung disease in preterm infants.

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9.  Prophylactic nasal continuous positive airways pressure in newborns of 28-31 weeks gestation: multicentre randomised controlled clinical trial.

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10.  European perspective on less invasive surfactant administration-a survey.

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