Frontiers in Pediatrics (Dec 2020)

Echocardiography-Guided Management of Preterms With Patent Ductus Arteriosus Influences the Outcome: A Cohort Study

  • Gianluca Terrin,
  • Maria Di Chiara,
  • Giovanni Boscarino,
  • Paolo Versacci,
  • Violante Di Donato,
  • Antonella Giancotti,
  • Elisabetta Pacelli,
  • Francesca Faccioli,
  • Elisa Onestà,
  • Chiara Corso,
  • Alessandra Ticchiarelli,
  • Mario De Curtis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2020.582735
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Introduction: Echocardiography (ECHO) with color flow Doppler is considered as the gold standard to identify a hemodynamic patent ductus arteriosus (hs-PDA). However, the optimal diagnostic and therapeutic management for newborns with hs-PDA is still controversial. We aimed to investigate two clinical strategies: (1) targeted treatment based on ECHO criteria and (2) treatment based on ECHO criteria in addition to clinical signs and symptoms.Materials and Methods: This is a cohort study including all neonates consecutively admitted in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of University La Sapienza in Rome, with gestational age <32 weeks or body birth weight <1,500 g and with a diagnosis of hs-PDA as confirmed by ECHO evaluation performed within 72 h of life. We classified the babies in two cohorts: (A) pharmacological treatment immediately after ECHO screening and (B) pharmacological therapy for PDA was administered when the relevance of a hs-PDA was associated with clinical signs of hemodynamic instability.Results: We considered as primary outcome newborns who survived without any morbidities (A: 48.1% vs. B: 22.2%, p = 0.022). In particular, we found that the rate of intraventricular hemorrhage stage ≥2 was increased in cohort B (A: 3.7% vs. B 24.4%, p = 0.020). A multivariate analysis showed that assignment to cohort A independently influences the primary outcome.Conclusions: Adopting an hs-PDA management option based on ECHO-directed therapy regardless of symptoms may reduce the morbidity and improve the survival of very low birth weight infants.

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