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a Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, St Michaels Hospital, Bristol BS2 8EG, b Department of Paediatrics, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU, c National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, Radcliffe Infirmary NHS Trust, Oxford OX2 6HE
Correspondence to: Dr D J Murphy 22 Manor Park, Redland, Bristol BS6 7HH
| Abstract |
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Objective: To identify neonatal risk factors for
cerebral palsy among very preterm babies and in particular the associations independent of the
coexistence of antenatal and intrapartum factors.
Design: Case-control study.
Setting: Oxford health region.
Subjects: Singleton babies born between 1984 and
1990 at less than 32 weeks' gestation who survived to discharge from hospital: 59 with
cerebral palsy and 234 randomly selected controls without cerebral palsy.
Main outcome measures: Adverse neonatal factors
expressed as odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals.
Results: Factors associated with an increased risk
of cerebral palsy after adjustment for gestational age and the presence of previously identified
antenatal and intrapartum risk factors were patent ductus arteriosus (odds ratio 2.3; 95%
confidence interval 1.2 to 4.5), hypotension (2.3; 1.3 to 4.7), blood transfusion (4.8; 2.5 to 9.3),
prolonged ventilation (4.8; 2.5 to 9.0), pneumothorax (3.5; 1.6 to 7.6), sepsis (3.6; 1.8 to 7.4),
hyponatraemia (7.9; 2.1 to 29.6) and total parenteral nutrition (5.5; 2.8 to 10.5). Seizures were
associated with an increased risk of cerebral palsy (10.0; 4.1 to 24.7), as were parenchymal
damage (32; 12.4 to 84.4) and appreciable ventricular dilatation (5.4; 3.0 to 9.8) detected by
cerebral ultrasound.
Conclusion: A reduction in the rate of cerebral
palsy in very preterm babies requires an integrated approach to management throughout the
antenatal, intrapartum, and neonatal periods.
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Key messages
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| Introduction |
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Preterm birth is associated with a clear increase in risk of cerebral palsy.1 2 3 4 5 During the early 1980s there was an increase in the survival of very preterm babies which was accompanied by a sharp increase in the rate of cerebral palsy in this group. The aetiology of the cerebral damage has been the focus of considerable attention, and emphasis has recently shifted from intrapartum and neonatal factors to antenatal and prenatal events.6 7 8 9 Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain the origins of cerebral palsy in very preterm babies. Firstly, it may be the result of an ischaemic insult in utero leading to both preterm birth and damage to the white matter.1 This damage may be manifest later as cerebral palsy. Secondly, it may be that immature babies who are particularly vulnerable to cerebral haemorrhage and ischaemia sustain injury as a result of intrapartum and neonatal complications.10 A third possibility is that cerebral palsy represents the endpoint of a continuum of adverse events which occur throughout the period when the brain is especially vulnerable to ischaemia. These events may occur before, during, and after birth.
A better understanding of the aetiology of preterm cerebral palsy is necessary for preventive strategies and treatments to be developed. In efforts to understand aetiological factors, however, an attempt must be made to disentangle neonatal factors that are causes of cerebral palsy from those that are consequences of earlier disturbances. In a recent case-control study of antenatal and intrapartum risk factors for cerebral palsy in very preterm babies we found associations between chorioamnionitis, prolonged rupture of membranes, and maternal infection and an increased risk of cerebral palsy.8 We also found associations between pre-eclampsia and delivery without labour and a decreased risk of cerebral palsy. Although adverse antenatal events seem to be important to our understanding of the origins of cerebral palsy, it is likely that these events contribute only to some of the cases of preterm cerebral palsy and that others have their origins in adverse neonatal events or as a result of a continuum of adverse effects throughout antenatal and early neonatal life. To investigate this further we carried out a case-control study on our original study population of singletons born before 32 weeks of gestation that was designed to identify neonatal risk factors for cerebral palsy in very preterm babies and, in particular, the associations independent of the coexistence of previously identified antenatal and intrapartum factors.
| Subjects and methods |
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Selection of subjects
All the selected babies were singletons of less than 32 completed weeks of gestation who
survived to hospital discharge, born to mothers resident in Oxfordshire and West Berkshire
between 1984 and 1990. Multiple births were excluded from this study as current evidence
suggests that the risk factors for cerebral palsy in this group may differ from those in singleton
births.11
Gestational age for all groups was estimated by using a combination of menstrual dates and an ultrasound scan performed before 20 weeks' gestation. The scan date was preferred if the menstrual date was uncertain or there was a discrepancy of more than 14 days between the menstrual date and the scan estimate.
CasesFifty nine children with cerebral palsy were identified from the Oxford region register of early childhood impairments.12 The definition of cerebral palsy used by the register is that of a permanent impairment of voluntary movement or posture presumed to be due to permanent damage to the immature brain. The register includes children of mothers who were resident within the former Oxford health region at the time of delivery. Multiple sources of ascertainment are used to compile the register, and the condition of the children is determined at the age of 3 and 5 years.
ControlsA total of 474 babies who
survived to discharge and did not develop cerebral palsy were identified from two sources to
ensure maximum ascertainment: the hospital admission registers and the Oxford record linkage
study. On the basis of an audit of preterm birth at the John Radcliffe Hospital (unpublished data)
we estimated that an adverse neonatal factor would be present in 25-30% of
controls. We predicted that a study population of 59 cases of cerebral palsy with four controls
for each case would be large enough to detect for each neonatal factor an odds ratio of 2.5 with
80% power and an
level of 0.05. We wished, therefore, to select approximately
half of the potential controls, and 235 controls were thus randomly selected. Controls were
selected from the entire geographical population of very preterm babies (<32 completed
weeks' gestation) but were not matched with the cases for gestational age. An unmatched
case-control study design allowed us to investigate the relation between gestational age
and cerebral palsy among very preterm babies.
Data sources
The neonatal notes of babies included in the study were reviewed by a researcher unaware
of the children's outcomes. A detailed dataset was completed, encompassing 52 variables
including characteristics at birth; cardiovascular, respiratory, systemic, and metabolic
complications; neurological sequelae; and cerebral ultrasound findings. Patent ductus arteriosus
(clinical diagnosis supported by cardiac ultrasonography, requiring indomethacin or surgical
ligation), hypotension (mean blood pressure <30 mm Hg on at least two occasions), blood
transfusion for either anaemia or hypotension, prolonged mechanical ventilation (duration of at
least seven days), pneumothorax (diagnosis confirmed by chest x ray, requiring insertion of chest drain), and sepsis (clinical diagnosis
confirmed with microbiology, requiring antimicrobial therapy) were of special interest. Details
of diagnosis, onset, duration, and management were recorded. Birth trauma referred to severe
bruising or x ray evidence of a fracture.
Ultrasound data were included if at least two scans were available, the first recorded during the first week of life and the second as near as possible to six weeks after birth. This approach was likely to identify lesions developing in both the early and late neonatal periods. In fact most babies had daily scans for the first week and weekly scans thereafter, with additional scans if clinically indicated. Ultrasound scanners (Advanced Technical Laboratories) used were the ATL 300C until 1988 and the UM4 thereafter with 7.5 MHZ transducer heads. The findings were described by using a classification modified from a data sheet used in a neonatal trial (OSIRIS).13 The right and left cerebral hemispheres were described separately in terms of germinal layer or intraventricular haemorrhage, ventricular dilatation, parenchyma echodensity, and parenchyma cysts. Moderate ventricular dilatation was assigned where the ventricular index was above the 97th centile and hydrocephalus was assigned when the dilatation was more than 4 mm above the 97th centile, using a centile chart from an unpublished study by M Levene et al. Parenchyma cyst was an umbrella term used for any parenchymal echolucency suggesting a cavity. For the purposes of this study parenchymal echodensities and echolucencies were grouped together and termed parenchyma damage.
Antenatal and intrapartum data had been recorded from the obstetric notes of the mothers; these data were available from our earlier study.8 Factors included in the logistic regression model as potentially important confounders were antepartum haemorrhage, maternal infection, chorioamnionitis, prolonged rupture of membranes, pre-eclampsia, and the mode of delivery.
Ethical approval
The approval of the Oxfordshire and West Berkshire ethics committees was obtained
before the start of the study.
Statistical methods
The odds ratio associated with a given factor estimates the risk of cerebral palsy given the
factor relative to the risk of cerebral palsy without the factor. The 95% confidence
intervals for crude odds ratios were calculated with the programme CIA.14 The odds ratios with adjustment for potential confounders were
calculated by logistic regression, using the statistical package for the social sciences.15 As the study populations were unmatched for gestational age,
in the first instance an odds ratio was calculated for each neonatal factor with adjustment for
gestational age. Biologically plausible interactions of neonatal factors were investigated by
entering variables into a logistic regression model in a forward conditional fashion. Only
variables with a strong association with cerebral palsy remained significant (P<0.05)
independent of the other variables. We included these factors in further regression models,
looking for relations between neonatal factors and cerebral palsy independent of the presence of
adverse antenatal factors and the delivery mode. There were no more than six variables in a
logistic regression model at any one time. Trends in the rates of survival and cerebral palsy
among survivors by gestational age were tested by
2 tests for
trend.
| Results |
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Of 638 singleton babies born alive at less than 32 completed weeks' gestation to mothers resident in Oxford district and West Berkshire during 1984-90, 105 died before discharge. The survival rate increased with increasing gestational age (P<0.0001; fig 1) and the incidence of cerebral palsy among survivors decreased with increasing gestational age (P<0.0001; fig 2).
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Neonatal notes were available for all 59 children with cerebral palsy and 234 controls, a total of 293 babies. Mean gestational age at birth for children with cerebral palsy was 1.3 (95% confidence interval 0.7 to 1.9) weeks less than for the controls (mean 28.6 (SD 2.3; range 24-32) weeks v 29.9 (1.9; 23-32) weeks; P<0.0001). As this difference in gestational age confounds any comparison between cases and controls, odds ratio estimates were adjusted for gestational age. Further adjustment for birth weight did not affect the results; hence odds ratios are reported without this adjustment.
Neonatal factors
An Apgar score of
3 at 5 minutes was significantly associated with an increased risk
of cerebral palsy (odds ratio 5.3 (1.4 to 21) (table 1).
Otherwise the two groups did not differ significantly in characteristics of the babies or condition
at birth.
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Cardiovascular and respiratory complications were common among these babies: 232 (79%) had at least one complication. Patent ductus arteriosus, hypotension, transfusion, prolonged ventilation, and pneumothorax were associated with cerebral palsy after gestational age was adjusted for (table 2). On forward conditional logistic regression of the cardiovascular and respiratory factors described, transfusion and pneumothorax were independently associated with cerebral palsy (odds ratios 2.2 (1.1 to 4.7) and 4.8 (2.2 to 10.8) respectively).
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Sepsis, total parenteral nutrition, and hyponatraemia were associated with an increased risk of cerebral palsy (table 3). The numbers with hyponatraemia were small, however, and this association could be a chance finding. The association with sepsis was independent of other systemic, cardiovascular, or respiratory complications (odds ratio 3.3 (1.6 to 6.8)). The sequence of antenatal infection and neonatal sepsis was strongly associated with cerebral palsy, but this occurred in only a few subjects (table 4).
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Neonatal seizures occurred in 28 (9.6%) babies and were associated with a highly significant increased risk of cerebral palsy (table 5). Cerebral ultrasound scans were available for a total of 239 (82%) babies, with a similar proportion for cases and controls. Isolated intraventricular haemorrhage was not associated with an increased risk of cerebral palsy, but there was a strong association between cerebral palsy and parenchymal lesions and ventricular dilatation. Retinopathy of prematurity (all grades) occurred more frequently among cases than controls, but the difference was not significant at the 5% level.
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Neonatal factors controlled for antenatal and intrapartum events
Patent ductus arteriosus, hypotension, transfusion, prolonged ventilation, pneumothorax,
sepsis, hyponatraemia, and total parenteral nutrition were associated with an increased risk of
cerebral palsy after adjustment by logistic regression for gestational age, antenatal complications,
and the mode of delivery (table 6). The only antenatal
factors of importance in the logistic regression model were chorioamnionitis, any maternal
infection, and mode of delivery.
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| Discussion |
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Neonatal complications
Several cardiovascular, respiratory, and systemic factors investigated in this study of very
preterm babies were associated with an increased risk of cerebral palsy. In earlier studies,
hypotension, transfusion, and patent ductus arteriosus have been associated with periventricular
leukomalacia,16 17
18 19 an ultrasound
finding which predicts later handicap (especially cerebral palsy) more accurately than any other
antecedent.20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Pneumothorax and
prolonged ventilation have been associated with both periventricular leukomalacia17 19 30 and cerebral palsy.31
32 The findings in this study are consistent with these
observations, supporting the hypothesis that cardiovascular and respiratory disturbances have a
role in the aetiology of cerebral ischaemia in very preterm babies.
A second hypothesis concerns infection, and several studies have shown associations between neonatal sepsis and both periventricular leukomalacia17 18 19 and cerebral palsy.32 Our results support this hypothesis as neonatal sepsis and cerebral palsy were strongly associated even after other potentially confounding neonatal complications were adjusted for.
These findings suggest a role for several neonatal complications in the aetiology of cerebral palsy in preterm babies. The difficulty in interpreting these findings, however, lies in determining which neonatal factors are causes of cerebral palsy and which are consequences of earlier disturbances in the antenatal and intrapartum periods and already part of the outcome. Some neonatal factors, such as transfusion, may be markers of severity of neonatal illness or may be the consequence of a disabling cerebral haemorrhage. Our previous study of antenatal and intrapartum risk factors for cerebral palsy in very preterm babies found a strong association between maternal infection and, in particular, chorioamnionitis and an increased risk of cerebral palsy. Maternal infection occurred, however, in only 37% of cases and 17% of controls and is likely to explain only a proportion of cases of preterm cerebral palsy. It is possible, therefore, that the origins of cerebral palsy lie in the neonatal period for a large proportion of very preterm babies. In addition, because of the design of a case-control study it is not possible to predict the timing of cerebral damage in relation to the insult and it is possible that the ischaemia associated with chorioamnionitis is not manifest until the neonatal period and may occur only if the baby suffers an additional further insult in the neonatal period. Our finding that the sequence of maternal infection followed by neonatal sepsis was strongly associated with cerebral palsy lends some strength to the theory of a continuum of insults in the pathogenesis of preterm cerebral palsy. However, this sequence of events affected only a small proportion of the study population.
Timing of brain injury
The question of the timing of cerebral damage was addressed in a study of the ultrasound
findings and clinical events of preterm babies with cerebral palsy.4 Although antenatal complications were common, only a small
proportion of babies (2/18) had evidence of antenatal cerebral damage; most had evidence
of parenchymal damage of neonatal onset. These observations suggest a role for neonatal
complications in the pathogenesis of preterm cerebral palsy.
Grether et al,9 in a recent study of prenatal and perinatal factors and cerebral palsy in very low birthweight infants, considered the interaction between prenatal and neonatal events and found chorioamnionitis to be associated with cerebral palsy only when seizures occurred in the neonatal period. With our previous study we had a full dataset of antenatal, intrapartum, and neonatal factors and could examine the independent associations between neonatal complications and cerebral palsy by controlling for the presence of antenatal and intrapartum factors. Transfusion, prolonged ventilation, pneumothorax, and sepsis had strong associations with cerebral palsy, adding further support to the hypothesis that cardiorespiratory disturbances and infection contribute to the aetiology of cerebral palsy in at least a proportion of cases and, more particularly, that this contribution can be independent of antenatal and intrapartum disturbances.
Cerebral lesions
As in previous studies of periventricular leukomalacia and cerebral palsy, we found strong
associations between neonatal seizures, ultrasonically diagnosed parenchymal damage and
ventricular dilatation, and preterm cerebral palsy. It is possible, of course, that cerebral
ultrasound lesions arise incidentally as a result of severe physiological disturbances which in
themselves cause cerebral palsy. This is unlikely, though, because ultrasound findings are so
much more predictive of cerebral palsy than are cardiorespiratory complications. The statistical
power of this study was limited for assessment of the complex interaction of these neurological
factors and antenatal, intrapartum and neonatal events, and the results of multivariate analyses
could be misleading. These interrelationships could be evaluated, however, with combined data
from multiple sources.
In conclusion, we suspect that cerebral palsy has multiple risk factors, both causes and modifiers, but that a proportion of cases of cerebral palsy among very preterm singletons have their origins in the neonatal period. It would seem, therefore, that a major reduction in cerebral palsy among very preterm babies will arise only from an integrated approach throughout the antenatal, intrapartum, and neonatal periods to the management of any baby at risk. The possibility that new neonatal interventions may lead to a reduction or an increase in the frequency of cerebral palsy among very preterm babies can be tested by well designed randomised controlled trials.
| Acknowledgements |
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Funding: DJM was funded by Action Research; AJ was funded by the Department of Health.
Conflict of interest: None.
| References |
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1200 grams
at birth. Dev Med Child Neurol
1988;30:342-8.