PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Prenatal parental involvement in decision for delivery room management at 22-26 weeks of gestation in France - The EPIPAGE-2 Cohort Study.

  • Cerise Levaillant,
  • Laurence Caeymaex,
  • Hélène Béhal,
  • Monique Kaminski,
  • Caroline Diguisto,
  • Barthélémy Tosello,
  • Elie Azria,
  • Olivier Claris,
  • Pierre Bétrémieux,
  • Laurence Foix L'Hélias,
  • Patrick Truffert,
  • EPIPAGE 2 Extreme Prematurity Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221859
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. e0221859

Abstract

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ObjectiveOur main objective was to examine if parental prenatal preferences predict delivery-room management of extremely preterm periviable infants. The secondary objectives were to describe parental involvement and the content of prenatal counseling given to parents for this prenatal decision.DesignProspective study of neonates liveborn between 22 and 26 weeks of gestation in France in 2011 among the neonates included in the EPIPAGE-2 study.Setting18 centers participating in the "Extreme Prematurity Group" substudy of the EPIPAGE-2 study.Patients302 neonates liveborn between 22-26 weeks among which 113 with known parental preferences while parental preferences were unknown or unavailable for 186 and delivery room management was missing for 3.ResultsData on prenatal counseling and parental preferences were collected by a questionnaire completed by professionals who cared for the baby at birth; delivery room (DR) management, classified as stabilization or initiation of resuscitation (SIR) vs comfort care (CC). The 113 neonates studied had a mean (SD) gestational age of 24 (0.1) weeks. Parents of neonates in the CC group preferred SIR less frequently than those with neonates in the SIR group (16% vs 88%, p ConclusionParental involvement in prenatal decision-making did not reach satisfying rates in the studied setting. When available, prenatal parental preference was a determining factor for DR management of extremely preterm neonates. Potential biases in the content of prenatal counselling given to parents need to be evaluated.