Ophthalmological Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Intervention, Multi-Center Study to Determine the Role of Fatty Acids in Serum in Preventing Retinopathy of Prematurity (MDM)
The study is a Randomized Intervention, Multi-Center Study to Determine the Role of Fatty
Acids in Serum and Breast Milk in preventing Retinopathy of Prematurity Subjects who meet all
inclusion and none of the exclusion criteria will be enrolled into the study. Upon entry into
the study, subjects will be randomized and given a unique subject number.
A randomized intervention study of 105+105 (number based on power analysis regarding up to
date ROP frequency, see 5.1 and 11.1) infants without major malformations born with a
gestational age less than 28 weeks + 0 days will be performed.
Every year around 10-12 % of all infants in Europe and the USA are born prematurely which
results in 950000 preterm infants per year (500000 in Europe and 450000 in USA). Direct
complications of preterm birth account for one million deaths each year worldwide, and
preterm birth is a risk factor in over 50% of all neonatal deaths. In addition, preterm birth
can result in a range of long-term complications in survivors, with the frequency and
severity of adverse outcomes rising with decreasing gestational age and decreasing quality of
care. The annual costs, beside patient suffering and parental emotional stress, of preterm
care in USA amounts to 26,2 billion United States dollar in terms of immediate neonatal
intensive care, subsequent long-term complex health care needs, as well as lost economic
productivity.
Possible problems that may occur after a preterm birth are:
Organ disorders (intestine, heart, lung - BPD and asthma), ears (hearing problems), eyes (ROP
and visual problems).
Feeding problems and failure to thrive, Poor general growth,Physical disabilities such as
cerebral palsy,Cognitive impairment,Learning disability or behavioral problems such as
attention deficit (ADD) or autism spectrum disorders. Of infants born extremely prematurely,
i.e. at less than 28 weeks gestation or with extremely low birth weight (<1000 g), 20 - 30%
may show developmental disorders requiring treatment (3, 4). Impaired cognitive development
and abnormal behavior may cause problems at school; in some countries the percentage of
learning difficulties in the preterm population is as high as 25%.
Much has been done to improve neonatal care e.g. target levels for oxygen saturation has been
an issue for extensive discussions and clinical trials. In fact, the optimal oxygen
saturation level for preterm infants has been called "a moving target", fluctuating almost as
much as our patients oxygen saturation levels. Reaching a consensus on what these levels
should be is still a work in progress. Nutrient delivery is another important and central
area of neonatal care which is closely associated with morbidity outcome, and is in need of
evidence-based guidelines. The project therefore aims to improve nutrient delivery to prevent
or reduce the development of preterm disabilities.
There is a long tradition in neonatology to develop national and in some cases local
guidelines for care in each individual Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). This has resulted
in a wide range of treatment approaches and experience-based strategies. These approaches may
differ between countries and hospitals and even between neonatologists at the same hospital.
There is, for example, a fragmented approach and incomplete compliance to guidelines for
nutrient delivery, one important medical parameter tightly associated with neonatal
morbidities. Although over 3000 randomized controlled trials have been reported in the field
of neonatology, few interventions have yet been subjected to unbiased evaluation.
Available nutritional fatty acid guidelines are not evidence-based and neither optimal
composition nor amounts needed to meet the demands of these immature infants are known. What
is known is that most infants born extremely preterm develop a large energy deficit resulting
in poor neonatal growth. Many experience moderate hyperglycemia associated with lipid
infusion. Hyperglycemia is a strong risk factor for preterm mortality as well as for ROP and
other disorders of prematurity. With commonly used lipid solutions, preterm new-borns
experience a rapid decline in blood fatty acid proportions of the long chain polyunsaturated
fatty acids (LCPUFA), Arachidonic acid (AA) and DHA, as compared to the intra-uterine
situation.
In Sweden, approximately 300 infants are born extremely preterm i.e. before 28 gestational
weeks yearly. With modern neonatal care, infants born as early as at 23-24 weeks of
gestation, in the second trimester of gestation, have more than 50% chance of survival. The
third trimester is a period of intense growth and differentiation of the central nervous
system (CNS) of which the retina is a part, with rapid formation of synapses and dendritic
spines and development of retinal photoreceptor cells. During this fetal time period AA and
DHA are selectively transferred from the mother to her fetus and blood fractions of DHA
increase above maternal values. AA fractions are high, twice those of the mother, from at
least 24 weeks of gestation. After very preterm birth, the fractions of AA and DHA fall. In
utero glucose, not lipid is the main source of energy and the LCPUFAs transferred during the
third trimester play important structural and functional roles in membranes of the central
nervous system and most other organs.
DHA, which is an omega-3 LCPUFA is derived from algae and oily fish is the pre-dominant fatty
acid of membrane phospholipids in the brain grey matter and the retina, especially its rod
outer segments. DHA is not merely a structural component of cell membranes but essential for
proper function of membranes. Since the capacity to synthesize DHA is limited in humans and
especially in infants, it needs to be provided in the diet. Dietary DHA is needed for optimal
functional maturation of the retina and visual cortex, it is a major component at the
synaptic site, modulating the uptake and release of neurotransmitters. Absolute accretion of
DHA in the brain is greater before than after term and DHA is also accumulated in adipose
tissue. In addition, omega-3 LCPUFA has the potential to reduce oxidative stress, deranged
glucose metabolism and inflammation.
While many studies have focused on DHA and its role in fetal and neonatal development, few
studies have addressed the role of the omega-6 LCPUFA AA during fetal life and after preterm
birth. Like DHA, AA is an important component of cell membranes. Altered cell membrane
composition results in altered cell function. AA is abundant in the vascular endothelium and
in glia where it plays different roles than DHA which is especially abundant in retinal rod
outer segments and in synapses and brain grey matter. In the retina AA metabolites contribute
to neurovascular coupling i.e. modulation of blood flow with neuronal activity. Metabolites
of AA both stimulate and inhibit inflammation and angiogenesis. In addition, AA is involved
in blood vessel tonus control with AA derivatives mediating both vessel relaxation and
contraction. Low AA concentrations are associated with late onset sepsis in preterm infants.
Improved development of very preterm infants fed twice as much AA as DHA than of infants fed
equal amounts of AA and DHA was recently reported.
After extremely preterm birth energy expenditures increase, oral intake often takes some
weeks to establish and total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is invariably required during the
initial postnatal weeks. After birth lipids are the main source of energy, initially as
integral part of administered TPN.
Preterm infants treated with soy and olive oil based parenteral lipid solutions (Intralipid
and Clinoleic) have low levels of LCPUFAs and increased supply of DHA has been recommended.
It has been demonstrated that low DHA levels are associated with compromised fetal insulin
sensitivity and insulin resistance in preterm infants is common and strongly associated with
neonatal morbidity. Few studies have examined associations between low AA and preterm
neonatal morbidities.
One of the most severe morbidities affecting preterm infants is sight threatening ROP, a
disorder characterized by reduced retinal vascularization followed by pathologic
neovascularization which can lead to retinal detachment and blindness similar to diabetic
retinopathy. ROP develops during the neonatal period and outcome is available around term age
(40 postmenstrual weeks), which makes it a useful marker for short term outcome of
neurovascular development in interventional studies.
In animal studies, a diet rich in omega-3 LCPUFAs reduced pathologic retinal
neovascularization in oxygen induced retinopathy, through reduction of inflammatory mediators
and attenuation of endothelial cell activation.
In two recent studies, the frequencies of ROP needing treatment as well as cholestasis were
significantly reduced when a solution containing fish oil (SMOFlipid) was provided compared
to Clinoleic in preterm infants with birth weight 1250 grams. In addition, ROP frequency was
reduced in infants receiving SMOFlipid as compared to those receiving Intralipid. No
randomized controlled trial comparing convention-al fatty acid administration without and
with supplementation of AA and DHA from birth with regard to ROP has been published.
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