Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pulmonary Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Ex-preterm Children With and Without Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia To Understand Risk of Emphysematous Changes (PICTURE)
Health Issue: Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a chronic lung disease, is the most common
complication of being born premature. Damage to the still developing lung stops the normal
formation of the alveoli. Young adults with a history of BPD have lower lung function, early
heart disease, and increased risk of death, compared to those without BPD. Recently, it has
been reported that they may also develop a type of lung disease typically seen in older
adults with a longstanding history of smoking. The severity of lung disease is usually
measured using pulmonary function tests (PFT), but these tests may be normal, even in the
presence of important changes in the fine structure of the lung. Such structural changes may
be early markers of future lung disease and can be detected using lung magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI). Unlike other ways of imaging the lungs, MRI does not expose people to harmful
X-rays. To date, no studies have been done to examine the fine structure of the lung of
school-aged children who had a history of BPD, to determine whether there are signs of lung
disease that might not otherwise be obvious. This is important because once armed with this
information, preventive measures can be taken to avoid worsening of lung disease.
Objective: 1) In 7-9 year-old children born extremely premature, lung MRI will be compared
between those with and without BPD. The Investigators expect to observe more severe
structural lung abnormalities in children with BPD, compared to those without BPD; 2) The
Investigators will test to see if children with more severe MRI abnormalities also have worse
lung function, and/or more symptoms of breathing problems. The Investigators expect to
observe more PFT abnormalities in children with BPD than in those without and that these will
match up with lung fine structure abnormalities identified on MRI.
How will work be undertaken? Children 7-9 years old who were born extremely prematurely will
be recruited to participate in this study. Participants will be identified from Neonatal
Follow-up clinics they attended. The Investigators will enroll 20 children with BPD and 20
without BPD. Participants will have lung MR images taken, during which they need to lie still
for a few minutes. PFT will also be performed, during which they will blow into a machine.
Parents will be asked to complete questionnaires about breathing problems, their living
conditions (environment) and any doctor visits or hospital stays. Medical charts will be
reviewed for information about their birth.
Unique/Innovative Aspects: This will be the first study using MRI as an innovative way to
visualize and measure fine structure of the lung in children born prematurely with and
without BPD. These findings may be early markers of lung disease, which would identify
children who have, or are at risk of developing lung disease later in life, for whom the
Investigators may be able to offer treatments now and/or prevent worsening of lung disease.
Knowledge to Date: Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), the most common pulmonary complication
of prematurity, occurs in 41% of infants born before 28 weeks' gestation.
Defined as a need for oxygen at 36 weeks' postmenstrual age,2 BPD results in longterm
morbidity in children and adults, including reduced lung function, early cardiovascular
disease and premature death The reported severity of such impairments varies, as studies have
been conducted on small numbers of children with differing degrees of prematurity.
Furthermore, it is unclear what markers are most sensitive to predict long-term respiratory
compromise. While functional measures have been studied, micro-structural differences, that
may be quantified using pulmonary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), have not been evaluated
in this population, and may provide earlier quantitative markers of future respiratory
disease, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Recent advances in the
clinical care of preterm infants have permitted survival of ever more premature infants, in
whom alveolar development is incomplete, representing a new, relatively unstudied and growing
cohort with a new form of BPD.
This BPD is associated with arrested alveolar growth and development, with reduction in
alveolar surface area and pulmonary capillary blood volume. Yet, little is known about the
trajectory of associated lung changes through childhood. Traditional measures of pulmonary
function are lower in school aged children with history of BPD than in those preterm-born
without BPD, but they may still be within normal reference ranges. There is, however,
evidence that pulmonary function declines more steeply between age 8-18 years in those with
BPD and that lower infant lung function predicts lower adult lung function.
This is particularly concerning since there is increasing recognition that preterm born
adults have a significant burden of early lung disease. Emphysema has been reported in young
adults with a history of prematurity less extreme than the prematurity seen today. X-ray
computed tomography (CT) imaging detects pulmonary abnormalities in 98%, with emphysema in
47% of this less premature cohort as young adults. Not all of those with CT abnormalities,
however, have impaired pulmonary function tests (PFTs), thus highlighting the limitations of
conventional PFTs to detect disease. In childhood, PFTs, while very powerful indicators of
global lung health, may be relatively insensitive to detect early pulmonary structural
changes and regional lung abnormalities. Pulmonary dysfunction may not cause symptoms at rest
or correlate with PFTs in childhood, but may become apparent with exercise, infection, or
aging. Structural changes in the lung parenchyma may already be present in childhood and may
be earlier markers of current and future respiratory disease than conventional PFT. Such
changes may be detected with pulmonary MRI of the lung, as has been shown in COPD and in
pilot work in BPD MRI has significant advantages over CT, including lack of exposure to
ionizing radiation and high resolution of fine tissue structure. Recent advances in pulmonary
MRI, including ultra-short echo time pulse sequences, generate pulmonary images with enhanced
parenchymal signal intensity which rival CT images for visualization of lung parenchyma and
vasculature. MRI is emerging as a research tool and may ultimately replace CT for pediatric
thoracic imaging tasks and serial evaluations.
To the Investigators knowledge, conventional and ultra-short echo time 1H MRI studies of
children with histories of prematurity and BPD have not been performed to quantify
microstructural pulmonary abnormalities. The Investigators therefore propose a study to
compare pulmonary micro-structural (MRI) and functional (PFT) abnormalities in premature
children with and without history of BPD. The investigators hypothesize that pulmonary tissue
destruction and/or emphysematous changes will be evident on MRI and will be worse in
ex-premature infants with a history of BPD than in those without history of BPD. Further, the
investigators hypothesize that MRI will be more sensitive to detect lung changes than PFT,
but that MRI changes will correlate with PFT abnormalities. Ultimately, this information will
form the basis of future longitudinal studies to evaluate progression of pulmonary disease
and assess effects of new treatment strategies in this population.
Research Questions Amongst 7-9 year old children with a history of prematurity (< 28 weeks'
gestation), comparing those with and without a history of BPD
1. Are there measureable differences in pulmonary micro-structure, quantified using MRI
signal intensity (primary question)?
2. What is the association between pulmonary micro-structural measurements quantified using
pulmonary MRI and pulmonary function outcomes (secondary questions):
1. airflow limitation, as measured by forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1),
FEV1/FVC, mid-expiratory flows (FEF25-75)
2. lung volumes and gas trapping , as measured by total lung capacity (TLC), residual
volume (RV) and RV/TLC ratio
3. diffusion capacity of carbon monoxide (DLCO), a marker of pulmonary alveolar volume
and pulmonary diffusing capacity
4. respiratory symptoms, social and environmental exposure history and healthcare
utilization, assessed by validated questionnaire (ATS-DLD-78-a) Methods Study
Setting: This cross-sectional study will be carried out at three Canadian tertiary
care pediatric centres (Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, Ontario,
The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario and Centre Hospitalier
Universitaire (CHU) Sainte-Justine, Montreal, Quebec). Ethics approval will be
obtained at all participating sites. Analysis: Descriptive statistics will be used
to describe the two groups. The primary analysis will be a comparison of signal
intensity between children with a history of BPD and those without, adjusting for
exposure to earlier (24-26 weeks) or later (27-28 weeks) gestational age, using a
two-way analysis of variance. Secondary analyses will examine the association
between MRI signal intensity and PFT, as well as signal intensity and respiratory
symptoms from the ATS-DLD-78-c questionnaire, using Spearman correlations.
Exploratory analyses will also examine the association between PFT and respiratory
symptoms, as well as parental smoking exposure, the relationship of obstetrical and
neonatal historical factors to signal intensity, PFT, and respiratory symptoms.
Feasibility: Imaging Feasibility: The MRI pulse sequence that is the foundation for this
study was previously developed and validated at 3T on a GE scanner by Dr. Parraga, who serves
as Co-Principal Investigator of this proposed research.42 The MR acquisitions will be enabled
using MR infrastructure at all 3 sites and 32 channel cardiac coils. Proof-of-concept for the
presence of extensive emphysema is provided for a 25 year old with a history of prematurity
and BPD, with significant MRI-evidence of widespread alveolar and acinar duct abnormalities
that are consistent with emphysema Recruitment Feasibility: Each year, approximately 400
infants born < 28 weeks' gestation attend neonatal clinic follow-up visits at 18 months of
age, at the three participating centres. As there are already established databases of these
children at each site, identification of those eligible for study participation will be
easily achieved.
At CHU Sainte-Justine, approximately 80 children aged 5-7 years are seen annually and from a
previous study recruiting at 5 years, participation rate was 60%, further supporting
feasibility for this study. Anticipated Results and Conclusions The Investigators anticipate
that there will be significantly more severe pulmonary micro-structural abnormalities, as
evidenced by lower pulmonary mean signal intensity, in 7-9 year olds born at less than 28
weeks' gestation, with a history of BPD, as compared to children born at less than 28 weeks'
gestation without BPD. The investigators expect that mean MRI-derived signal intensity will
correlate significantly with PFT measurements, as well as with the presence of chronic
respiratory symptoms and increased healthcare utilization. This is the first study using
innovative MRI techniques in relation to functional testing that will help characterize
regional pulmonary tissue destruction and/or emphysematous changes present in children with a
history of extreme prematurity, with and without BPD. In particular, MRI measurements may be
more sensitive markers of early lung disease than PFT or respiratory symptoms. Since these
children may only manifest signs of respiratory impairment in the presence of stressors,
knowledge of these MRI changes may prompt earlier or more aggressive respiratory support and
treatment to prevent respiratory compromise. Ultimately, there may be opportunity in future
to intervene with additional treatments that may halt progression to adult lung disease. This
is particularly important, given the increasing body of evidence for early COPD-like disease
in this group. This work may identify a BPD-COPD overlap syndrome, with unique
pathophysiology and potentially differential response to treatments from traditional COPD.
Potential Challenges: Children will be recruited for this study from neonatal follow-up
clinic databases that capture all of those graduating from the neonatal nursery and surviving
to 18 months. It is possible that some families may have since relocated or have been lost to
follow-up and/or that those willing to participate in a research study at age 7-9 years will
differ from those not willing/able to participate. Further, by studying children able to
perform PFT and to cooperate for MRI, the investigators will exclude those with significant
neurodevelopmental delay, who may also have more severe lung disease. As these are the main
study outcomes, however, this will be necessary. Inclusion of children with a history of BPD
ensures that those at the more severe end of the spectrum of early pulmonary complications,
who are expected to have more severe lung disease, are studied. Exercise testing is another
methodology to assess pulmonary and cardiovascular function. It is beyond the feasibility and
budget ($200 per test) for this study and also requires coordination tasks that may be
challenging for some participants. Nonetheless, it is an important consideration for future
work. There are few precedents for pulmonary MRI in children, particularly in those with
prematurity and BPD. Traditionally, MRI has been considered suboptimal in comparison to CT
for lung parenchyma imaging, due to the low tissue density and loss of signal from magnetic
field inhomogeneity at the air lung interfaces. Novel ultra-short echo time (UTE) pulse
sequences, however, permit greater signal from the pulmonary parenchyma, which makes MRI a
viable strategy to assess emphysematous changes in this population, without exposure to
ionizing radiation. In the neonatal intensive care unit, MRI has shown signal decreases
suggestive of alveolar simplification (emphysema) in those with severe BPD. It is possible
that children with a history of extreme prematurity without BPD will also have some degree of
pulmonary parenchymal change on MRI, although it is still expected that abnormalities will be
more severe in those with a history of BPD. This study is, however, powered to detect smaller
differences in signal intensity between groups than observed in adult COPD studies. The
investigators are not using a healthy term control group because the purpose of this research
is to assess radiological and functional biomarkers that will help clinicians and researchers
identify among preterm born children those at greater risk of long-lasting pulmonary problems
who would benefit the most from treatment.
Relevance: The ever growing population of extremely preterm born individuals, representing
approximately 27,000 Canadians less than 18 years old, of whom approximately 40% have BPD, is
at risk of development of early COPD-like emphysematous changes. Thus, neonatal conditions
may be at the origin of a substantial and disproportionately high burden of adult lung
disease, associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Prematurity and BPD, in
addition to smoking, is one of the strongest predictors of obstructive airways disease in
later life. In order to promote lung health and reduce the global burden of chronic lung
disease, it is necessary to understand the trajectory of lung growth, development and decline
across the lifespan in this at-risk population. Use of novel imaging strategies, more
sensitive than PFT or respiratory symptoms to quantify early changes in the lung, provides
new knowledge about the natural history of BPD in this population. Furthermore, MRI changes
can quantify improvement associated with therapeutic interventions and can be safely serially
evaluated across the lifespan. This is particularly important and exciting, given new
therapies on the horizon to treat BPD, including stem cell treatments.
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