JOURNAL ARTICLE
MULTICENTER STUDY
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, P.H.S.
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Evaluation of criteria for chronic lung disease in surviving very low birth weight infants. Newborn Lung Project.

Criteria in common use for the diagnosis of chronic lung disease of prematurity or bronchopulmonary dysplasia in the neonatal period have not been sufficiently compared and validated against indicators of later respiratory complications. In this study of all 680 infants < or = 1500 gm birth weight admitted to six perinatal centers August 1, 1988, to July 31, 1990, 524 were alive and had no major congenital anomalies at 5 years old. Of 419 who had given permission to release their names and addresses, 272 were located and participated in a follow-up study. The following diagnostic criteria for bronchopulmonary dysplasia and chronic lung disease of prematurity were used during the initial hospitalization: (1) use of supplemental oxygen on day 30 of life, (2) a comprehensive bronchopulmonary dysplasia severity score applied at 25 to 35 days of life developed by a clinician panel to adjust for practice variation in ventilatory support and blood gases, (3) use of supplemental oxygen on day 30 of life with radiographic evidence consistent with bronchopulmonary dysplasia between days 25 and 35 of life, (4) radiographic evidence consistent with bronchopulmonary dysplasia alone, and (5) use of supplemental oxygen at 36 weeks' postconceptional age. These criteria were assessed against use of bronchodilators or steroids during the first 2 years of life, diagnosis of asthma, and hospitalizations for respiratory causes up to age 5. Although all criteria were significantly associated with all the outcomes, radiographic evidence was most predictive. These results indicate that, during a period when 21% of neonates were exposed to antenatal steroids, 24% received surfactant and 9% received postnatal corticosteroids, radiographic evidence was more predictive of long-term respiratory outcome than other commonly used criteria.

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