Early hypoxemia burden is strongly associated with severe intracranial hemorrhage in preterm infants.
Schlüsselwörter
Abstrakt
OBJECTIVE
The objective of this study was to define the association between the burden of severe hypoxemia (SpO2 ≤70%) in the first week of life and development of severe ICH (grade III/IV) in preterm infants.
METHODS
Infants born at <32 weeks or weighing <1500 g underwent prospective SpO2 recording from birth through 7 days. Severe hypoxemia burden was calculated as the percentage of the error-corrected recording where SpO2 ≤70%. Binary logistic regression was used to model the relationship between hypoxemia burden and severe ICH.
RESULTS
A total of 163.3 million valid SpO2 data points were collected from 645 infants with mean EGA = 27.7 ± 2.6 weeks, BW = 1005 ± 291 g; 38/645 (6%) developed severe ICH. There was a greater mean hypoxemia burden for infants with severe ICH (3%) compared to those without (0.1%) and remained significant when controlling for multiple confounding factors.
CONCLUSIONS
The severe hypoxemia burden in the first week of life is strongly associated with severe ICH.