作者
Kristy Robledo,William O. Tarnow‐Mordi,Ingrid Rieger,Preeti K. Suresh,Andrew Martin,Carbo Yeung,Alpana Ghadge,Helen G. Liley,David A Osborn,Jonathan Morris,Wendy Hague,Martin Kluckow,Kei Lui,Roger F. Soll,Melinda Cruz,Anthony Keech,Adrienne Kirby,John Simes,Himanshu Popat,Shelley Reid,Adrienne Gordon,Koert de Waal,Ian Wright,Anne Wright,Jane Buchan,Michelle Stubbs,John P. Newnham,Karen Simmer,Cherry Young,Diane Loh,Kenneth Yuh Yen Kok,Andy Gill,Tobias Strunk,Michele Jeffery,Yan Chen,Scott Morris,Sanjay Sinhal,Kathryn Cornthwaite,Susan P. Walker,Andrew M. Watkins,Clare L. Collins,James Holberton,Elizabeth J Noble,Arvind Sehgal,Emma Yeomans,Kristy Elsayed,Mohamed E. Abdel‐Latif,Margaret Broom,Guan Koh,Annemarie Lawrence,Glenn Gardener,Jane Fox,David Cartwright,Pieter Koorts,M. A. Pritchard,Lisa McKeown,Anne Lainchbury,Antonia Shand,Joanna Michalowski,John Smyth,Srinivas Bolisetty,Alan Adno,Gaksoo Lee,Anna Lene Seidler,Lisa Askie,Katie Groom,Deborah A Eaglen,Ella C Baker,Harshad Patel,Natalie Wilkes,Joanna Gullam,Nicola Austin,Dianne E Leishman,Phil Weston,Nicola White,Nadia A Cooper,Roland Broadbent,Michael L. Stitely,Pauline Dawson,Walid El‐Naggar,Marlene Furlong,Tara Hatfield,Danièle De Luca,Alexandra Benachi,Emmanuelle Letamendia-Richard,Guillaume Escourrou,V. Dell’Orto,David G. Sweet,Muriel Millar,Shilpa Shah,Lumaan Sheikh,Shabina Ariff,Erin Morris,Leslie Young,Shannon K Evans,Michael A. Belfort,Kjersti M. Aagaard,Mohan Pammi,George T. Mandy,Manisha Gandhi,Jane B. Davey,Emma Shenton,Jennifer Cook Middleton,R. Anthony Black,Annie Cheng,Jamie Murdoch,Claire S. Jacobs,L Von Meyer,Kathryn Medlin,Heather Woods,K. O'Connor,Caitlin Bice,Katherine Scott,Marie Hayes,Debbie Cruickshank,Mekha Sam,Susan Ireland,Corrine Dickinson,Leith Poulsen,Andreja Fucek,Joanne E Hegarty,Jenny Rogers,Dorothy Sanchez,V. Zupan Simunek,Bakhtawar Hanif,Adrienne Pahl,Jerilyn Metayer,Lelia Duley,Neil Marlow,Deborah Schofield,Jennifer R. Bowen
摘要
Very preterm infants are at increased risk of adverse outcomes in early childhood. We assessed whether delayed clamping of the umbilical cord reduces mortality or major disability at 2 years in the APTS Childhood Follow Up Study.In this long-term follow-up analysis of the multicentre, randomised APTS trial in 25 centres in seven countries, infants (<30 weeks gestation) were randomly assigned before birth (1:1) to have clinicians aim to delay clamping for 60 s or more or clamp within 10 s of birth, both without cord milking. The primary outcome was death or major disability (cerebral palsy, severe visual loss, deafness requiring a hearing aid or cochlear implants, major language or speech problems, or cognitive delay) at 2 years corrected age, analysed in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with the Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12610000633088).Between Oct 21, 2009, and Jan 6, 2017, consent was obtained for follow-up for 1531 infants, of whom 767 were randomly assigned to delayed clamping and 764 to immediate clamping. 384 (25%) of 1531 infants were multiple births, 862 (56%) infants were male, and 505 (33%) were born before 27 weeks gestation. 564 (74%) of 767 infants assigned to delayed clamping and 726 (96%) of 764 infants assigned to immediate clamping received treatment that fully adhered to the protocol. Death or major disability was determined in 1419 (93%) infants and occurred in 204 (29%) of 709 infants who were assigned to delayed clamping versus 240 (34%) of 710 assigned to immediate clamping, (relative risk [RR]) 0·83, 95% CI 0·72-0·95; p=0·010). 60 (8%) of 725 infants in the delayed clamping group and 81 (11%) of 720 infants in the immediate clamping group died by 2 years of age (RR 0·70, 95% CI 0·52-0·95); among those who survived, major disability at 2 years occurred in 23% (144/627) versus 26% (159/603) of infants, respectively (RR 0·88, 0·74-1·04).Clamping the umbilical cord at least 60 s after birth reduced the risk of death or major disability at 2 years by 17%, reflecting a 30% reduction in relative mortality with no difference in major disability.Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.