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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03714633
Other study ID # TiSam
Secondary ID
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date September 1, 2018
Est. completion date December 31, 2024

Study information

Verified date April 2024
Source Stockholm University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Extreme premature Children will at discharge from Karolinska Hospital and Södersjukhuset in Stockholm be asked to participate in a study, examining the effects of a home-visit based post-discharge program aiming at facilitating the interaction between infants and parents, improving the development of the children, and the parental mental health. The study is a randomized controlled Trial (RCT), hence 50% of the participants will be offered treatment as usual (TAU) with addition of an extended follow-up program. The interaction-based program consists of one initial visit at the hospital followed by nine home-visits and two telephone calls during the child's first year of life. The interventionists are skilled Healthcare professionals with several years of experience from caring for premature infants and their parents. All interventionists have successfully completed a one year further education program, delivered one day per week and containing theoretical lectures, practice with actual cases, supervision on the cases, visits to the different parts of the neonatal care chain and discussions with a representative from the premature family association Sweden.


Description:

Detailed description of the intervention: the purpose of the initial visit at the neonatal unit or hospital ward where the child is still treated is to establish the foundation for the interventionist/family relationship and give the parent(-s) the opportunity to show the interventionist the environment where the infant has spent his/her first 3-5 months in life. Home-visit 1-3 and two telephone calls are provided before the child is three months corrected age. The focus of these home visits is to observe child and parent at home and validate the child's strengths and competences as well as enhancing the parent-child interaction, building on strengths. The child's strengths and interests will be summarized in a logbook owned by the parents. During home-visit 4-8 the interventionist, step by step and always with great regard to the child's level of development, will support the parent in using the home-environment in a developmental supporting manner for the child, find suitable objects/toys at home for the child to examine with mouth, hands and body, confirm the child's abilities and give suggestions on how to stimulate the child's further development. The logbook will now also contain suggestions for supporting the next developmental step, which will be formulated by the interventionist together with the parent. The ninth and last home-visit will emphasize the child's progress during the past year, look through the family logbook and both summarize the past year and talk about the next developmental step for the future. The intervention group receives the standard follow-up program just as the control group and will be referred to specialized care when needed. Compared to children not participating in the study, the study participants will receive an extended follow-up program, with assessment and questionnaires at term age, 3 months corrected age, 12 months corrected age, 24 months corrected age and 36 months corrected age. The research process and the study protocol have been published, see references below.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 130
Est. completion date December 31, 2024
Est. primary completion date January 3, 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 32 Weeks to 45 Weeks
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - extremely premature born babies - close to discharge from their neonatal intensive care unit hospital stay at Stockholm county council (Stockholms Läns Landsting). Exclusion Criteria: - Children with parent/parents who do not communicate in Swedish or English. - Patients not residing in Stockholm county. - Acute surgery patients who will spend a lot of time at hospitals far from Stockholm

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Stockholm Preterm Interaction-Based Intervention (SPIBI)
Post-discharge intervention to extreme premature infants and their parents

Locations

Country Name City State
Sweden Karolinska Hospital, Danderyds Sjukhus neonatalavdelning Danderyd
Sweden Karolinska Hospital Huddinge, neontalavdelningen Huddinge
Sweden Karolinska Hospital Solna
Sweden Södersjukhusets neonatalavdelning Stockholm
Sweden Stockholm University Stockholm

Sponsors (7)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Stockholm University Centrum för kompetensutveckling inom vård och omsorg, Stockholm University (funding), Clas Groschinskys Minnesfond, Sweden (funding), Filénska fonden, Sweden (funding), Karolinska Institutet, Queen Silvia Jubilee Fund for research on children and disability, Sweden (funding), Region Stockholm

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Sweden, 

References & Publications (8)

Baraldi E, Allodi MW, Lowing K, Smedler AC, Westrup B, Aden U. Stockholm preterm interaction-based intervention (SPIBI) - study protocol for an RCT of a 12-month parallel-group post-discharge program for extremely preterm infants and their parents. BMC Pediatr. 2020 Feb 1;20(1):49. doi: 10.1186/s12887-020-1934-4. — View Citation

Baraldi E, Allodi MW, Smedler AC, Westrup B, Lowing K, Aden U. Parents' Experiences of the First Year at Home with an Infant Born Extremely Preterm with and without Post-Discharge Intervention: Ambivalence, Loneliness, and Relationship Impact. Int J Envir — View Citation

Baraldi, E., Westling Allodi, M., Löwing, K., Smedler, A.-C., Westrup, B., & Ådén, U. (2019). Clinical Protocol & Research Process of Stockholm Preterm Interaction-Based Intervention, SPIBI. Pediatric Research, 86(Suppl.), 54-55. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41390-019-0521-6

Koldewijn K, van Wassenaer A, Wolf MJ, Meijssen D, Houtzager B, Beelen A, Kok J, Nollet F. A neurobehavioral intervention and assessment program in very low birth weight infants: outcome at 24 months. J Pediatr. 2010 Mar;156(3):359-65. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2009.09.009. Epub 2009 Nov 2. — View Citation

Koldewijn K, Wolf MJ, van Wassenaer A, Meijssen D, van Sonderen L, van Baar A, Beelen A, Nollet F, Kok J. The Infant Behavioral Assessment and Intervention Program for very low birth weight infants at 6 months corrected age. J Pediatr. 2009 Jan;154(1):33-38.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2008.07.039. Epub 2008 Sep 10. — View Citation

Meijssen DE, Wolf MJ, Koldewijn K, van Wassenaer AG, Kok JH, van Baar AL. Parenting stress in mothers after very preterm birth and the effect of the Infant Behavioural Assessment and Intervention Program. Child Care Health Dev. 2011 Mar;37(2):195-202. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2214.2010.01119.x. — View Citation

Spittle A, Orton J, Anderson PJ, Boyd R, Doyle LW. Early developmental intervention programmes provided post hospital discharge to prevent motor and cognitive impairment in preterm infants. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Nov 24;2015(11):CD005495. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD005495.pub4. — View Citation

Verkerk G, Jeukens-Visser M, Houtzager B, Koldewijn K, van Wassenaer A, Nollet F, Kok J. The infant behavioral assessment and intervention program in very low birth weight infants; outcome on executive functioning, behaviour and cognition at preschool age. Early Hum Dev. 2012 Aug;88(8):699-705. doi: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2012.02.004. Epub 2012 Mar 10. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Child's neurological development Hammersmith infant neurological examination, range 0-78 with a hypothesis of higher scores in intervention group. 3 months, 12 months, 24 months corrected age, hypothesis of higher score for intervention group
Other Child's motor development 2 Peabody developmental motor scales, PDMS. Subscale Stationary: range 0-42, subscale Locomotion range 0-138, subscale Object Manipulation range 0-30, subscale Grasping range 0-44 and subscale Visual-Motor Integration range 0-113. Hypothesis of higher scores in intervention group. Term age & 12 months corrected age, hypothesis of higher score for intervention group
Other Child's motor development 3 General movement assessment, GMA, scale Normal-Absent Fidgety 3 months corrected age
Other Child's general development Ages and stages questionnaire, ASQ-R. All five subscales Communication, Gross Motor, Fine Motor, Problem Solving, Personal-Social will be used, with a range from 0-300 all together. Hypothesis of higher scores in intervention group. 12 months, 24 months, 36 months corrected age, hypothesis that the parents of the intervention group scoring their children higher
Other Child's strengths and difficulties Strengths and difficulties questionnaire SDQ. 25 items on a 3-point scale, 5 questions of prosocial behaviour and 20 questions about various difficulties. Hypothesis of higher scores in the intervention group for prosocial behaviour and lower scores in the intervention group of the problematic subscales. 24 and 36 months corrected age, hypothesis of less difficulties and more strengths scored by parents in the intervention group
Other Child's autistic symptoms Modified checklist for autism in toddlers M-CHAT. Range 0-20 points, hypothesis of lower scores in intervention group. 24 months corrected age
Other Infant temperament Infant behavior questionnaire, IBQ-R. 37 items on a 7 point scale. Hypothesis of less problematic behaviour in intervention group, i.e. higher scores on subscales Smiling and Laughter and soothability; and lower scores on the subscales Fear and Distress to Limitations. 12 months corrected age
Other Parental satisfaction with the intervention Client satisfaction questionnaire, CSQ-8 & semi-structured interview. CSQ-8 has 8 items, and a range of 8-48 points. 12 months corrected age
Other Pre-school educators' view of the child's engagement in preschool Child Engagement Questionnaire (CEQ) Swedish version has 29 items rated on a 4 point scale and the summary score may range from 29 to 116 with higher scores indicating more positive engagement 24 and 36 months corrected age
Other Pre-school educators' view of the child's interaction in preschool Swedish questionnaire Ert Barn Vårt Samspel, has 36 items rated on a 5 points scale and the summary score may range from 36 to 180 with higher scores indicating more interactive behavior 24 and 36 months corrected age
Other Pre-school educators' view of the child's playtime in preschool Play time / Social Time Teacher Impression Scale. 16 items 1-5 Likert scale (min 16- max 80) higher scores indicating more social skills and play behavior 24 and 36 months corrected age
Other Pre-school educators' view of the child in preschool Semi-structured preschool teacher interview 24 or 36 months corrected age, depending on when the child has entered preschool
Other Pre-school educators' view of the child's level of function in preschool ICF-CY core sets. 12 items in Body functions (rated 0-9) and 22 items (rated 0-9) in Activities and Participation; higher scores indicate disability or developmental delay. 20 items covering Environmental factors (between +4 and +1 for facilitators; 0-9 for barriers) measure included to identify possible disability and environmental moderators. 24 and 36 months corrected age
Other Parent-child interaction long-term Emotional availability scales, EAS The scale has four parental dimensions; sensitivity, structure, non-intrusiveness, non-hostility and two child dimensions; child responsiveness and child involvement. Each subscale has a maximum score of 29 and a direct score of 1-7. Hypothesis of higher scores in intervention group. 24 months corrected age
Primary Parent-child interaction Emotional availability scales, EAS The scale has four parental dimensions; sensitivity, structure, non-intrusiveness, non-hostility and two child dimensions; child responsiveness and child involvement. Each subscale has a maximum score of 29 and a direct score of 1-7. Hypothesis of higher scores in intervention group. 12 months corrected age.
Secondary Child's general development Bayley scales of infant and toddler development (third edition; Bayley-III), measuring cognition, language, and motor development. Composite scores are standardized to mean (SD) scores of 100 (15), based on age-matched normative data. Higher scores in intervention group 24 months corrected age
Secondary Child's executive function Behaviour Rating of Executive Function Parental version BRIEF-P. All the 5 subscales will be used. Hypothesis of less executive problems in intervention group. 24 and 36 months corrected age
Secondary Child's motor development 1 Alberta Infant Motor Scale, AIMS. Range 0 - 58 points, with a hypothesis of higher scores for intervention group 3 months & 12 months corrected age
Secondary Parental depression Hospital anxiety and depression scale, HADS. Range depression subscale 0-21, range anxiety subscale 0-21. Hypothesis of lower scores in the intervention-parental group. Term age, 12, 24 and 36 months corrected age
Secondary Parental anxiety State/trait anxiety inventory, STAI. Maximum 80 points for the State-scale, and maximum 80 points for the trait-scale. Hypothesis of lower scores in the intervention-parental group Term age, 12, 24 and 36 months corrected age
Secondary Parental self-efficacy parental self-efficacy scale, PSE. PSE has 24 items at term age and 12 and 24 months and 48 items int he form for older ages, all items rated in a 0-10 scale. Hypothesis of higher score for intervention group at 12,24 and 36 months. Term age, 12, 24 and 36 months corrected age
Secondary Parental resilience Resilience scale, RES. RES is a 25-items scale with a 7-point Likert scale. Hypothesis of higher scores in the intervention group. Term age, 12, 24 and 36 months corrected age
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