Survival, morbidity, and resource use of infants of 25 weeks' gestational age or less

American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 185(1), 220-226, 2001

Abstract

Objective

The objective of this study was to examine survival, morbidity, and resource use in a large cohort of extremely preterm infants.

Study design

We examined all (n = 754) neonatal intensive care unit admissions born at < or =25 weeks' gestation and inborn deliveries (n = 949) between 22 and 25 weeks' gestation at 17 Canadian neonatal intensive care units.

Results

The overall survival rate was 63%, with a range from 14% at 22 weeks' gestation to 76% at 25 weeks' gestation. There was a high incidence of chronic lung disease (33%-51%), > or =grade 3 intraventricular hemorrhage (0%-16%), necrotizing enterocolitis (0%-14%), > or =stage 3 retinopathy of prematurity (27%-55%), nosocomial infection (25%-39%), and multiple gestation (18%-46%). Extremely preterm infants comprise 4% of neonatal intensive care unit admissions but account for 22% of deaths, 20%-60% of major morbidities, 11% of patient days, and 10%-35% of major procedures. Outborn infants had a higher incidence of chronic lung disease, severe retinopathy of prematurity, and intraventricular hemorrhage.

Conclusion

Extremely preterm infants have a high incidence of mortality and morbidity and consume disproportionate amounts of neonatal intensive care unit resources.

extremely preterm infant outcomes, neonatal intensive care 25 weeks gestation, micropreemie survival rates, extremely premature infant morbidity, neonatal intensive care resource utilization, preterm infant chronic lung disease, retinopathy of prematurity extremely preterm, intraventricular hemorrhage preterm infants, necrotizing enterocolitis preterm, viability limit neonatal outcomes, 22-25 weeks gestation survival, extremely low gestational age outcomes

Chan, K., Ohlsson, A., Synnes, A., Lee, D. S., Chien, L. Y., & Lee, S. K. (2001). Survival, morbidity, and resource use of infants of 25 weeks' gestational age or less. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *185*(1), 220-226. https://doi.org/10.1067/mob.2001.115280