Preterm Birth Clinical Trial
Official title:
Preterm Fetal Growth Restriction and Developmental Care
The goal of the project is to show the effectiveness of individualized developmental care and intervention, which begins with the FGR preterm infant's admission to the newborn intensive care unit (NICU) and extends to 2 weeks (w) after full term equivalent age or 2w CA (corrected age for prematurity).
The protocol aims to demonstrate the effectiveness of an intervention geared to significantly
improve functional competence for preterm infants with fetal growth restriction (FGR).
Incidence of FGR is estimated to be as high as 5% of the general obstetric population.
Preterms with FGR are doubly jeopardized. Aside from much higher mortality rates they also
show significantly increased morbidity rates, including significant learning disabilities and
school failure (>50%). The intervention's underlying premise holds that it is far more
effective to support the immature brain, which is compromised by FGR, to develop optimally
before the infant reaches full term rather than to attempt to ameliorate increasingly deviant
development after deviance has occurred. The goal of the project is to show the effectiveness
of individualized developmental care and intervention, which begins with the FGR preterm
infant's admission to the newborn intensive care unit (NICU) and extends to 2 weeks (w) after
full term equivalent age or 2w CA (corrected age for prematurity). Intervention in the NICU
is considered more advantageous for the infant's later development than delay of intervention
until after discharge home. The proposal maintains that the last trimester of gestation is a
critical period for brain development, especially when compromised by FGR. In-NICU
intervention at this critical brain development time is expected to reduce the infants'
hypersensitivity and reactivity while in the NICU, and to lead to reduction of the high
incidence of behavioral problems in infancy, which frequently foreshadows later behavioral
and learning problems as well as school failure.
The study aims to test three related hypotheses:
1. Individualized developmental NICU care and intervention will enhance FGR preterm
infants' brain development both functionally and structurally.
2. The in-NICU intervention will improve the parents' understanding of their infant's
individuality and equip them to feel more competent as parents.
3. The intervention itself, while individualized for each infant, will be quantifiable and
reliably reproducible.
The study will:
1. Test the effectiveness of the intervention by assessing brain development and functional
adaptation of a high risk preterm population (n=30) with documented intrauterine FGR and
born between 28 and 33w gestational age.
2. Assess the FGR preterm infants' neurodevelopment within one week from birth (baseline)
and again at 2w CA (outcome).
3. Compare the results on the effectiveness of the intervention for the FGR preterm infants
to a recently studied cohort of appropriately grown (AGA) preterm infants born at
comparable gestational ages, supported with the same intervention and measured in
comparable ways.
The primary infant measures proposed will be brain functional (EEG coherence, neurobehavioral
functioning) and brain structural assessments (MRI). The goal will be to examine the direct
causal connections and correlations among population characteristics, the intervention, and
ultimate outcome at 2w CA. The project is expected to deliver comprehensive and substantive
results in favor of the developmental NICU intervention for FGR preterm infants as well as
for the earlier studied AGA population. The proposed study is expected to demonstrate
intervention effectiveness in improving FGR preterm infants' neurodevelopment. It is
anticipated that the intervention-based improvement in brain structure and function will set
the stage for improvement in later performance, especially in terms of behavioral/emotional
adaptation, learning and school achievement, which are all critical for life success.
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