Preterm Birth Clinical Trial
Official title:
Adolescents Born Preterm: Nurtured Beginnings
This research study is a long-term follow-up to an earlier study of developmental care. For that study, high risk preterm newborns were randomly assigned to a standard care group, which received the standard care offered in the Newborn Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at the time, or to an experimental group, which received regular behavioral observations to determine if changes in their environment or care were needed. The purpose of the current study is to assess the functioning of these infants again, now that they are adolescents and to compare the groups to determine if the developmental care used in the original study is effective long-term.
The study will test continued long-term intervention effectiveness into adolescence of very
early born US preterm infants, who participated in a randomized Newborn Individualized
Developmental Care and Assessment Program (NIDCAP) trial, conducted by the principal
investigator, while the infants were cared for in the NICU for the first three months after
their very premature births. All adolescents to be studied participated as newborns and were
assigned either to control care (standard NICU care available at the time), or to
experimental care (NIDCAP developmental care, with weekly bedside observations and with
daily NIDCAP developmental specialist support to parents and staff), from NICU admission
until 2 weeks (w) after expected full-term due date ('corrected' age [CA]).
The strongly brain-based theory underlying the approach to earliest intervention described
here has been tested in several experimental studies, which are designed to investigate the
effects of planned purposeful modification of experience for very early born infants, who
spend the third trimester of gestation in the NICU. NIDCAP is based on an approach which
utilizes close observation of each infant's thresholds of moving from organization to
disorganization and stress, as exhibited by the infant's behavior. Care and environment are
then continuously dynamically adjusted, with the goal to increase the infant's
self-regulation and organization and decrease the infant's stress. This individualized model
of NICU care provides an opportunity to investigate the modifiability of very early born
infants' brain function and structure and the possibility of reducing or altogether
eliminating the disruption and disturbance of fetal brain development in the NICU. The
randomized scientific trials to date, conducted by the PI and by independent investigators
at other settings after formal training show consistent significant neurobehavioral and
neurophysiological improvements for the experimental groups across sites and studies.
All the adolescents to be studied were evaluated comprehensively at 2wCA and 9 months (m) CA
in terms of not only the commonly measured demographic, medical background and severity of
illness variables, but more importantly in terms of comprehensive neurobehavioral and EEG
outcome measures, analogues of later developmental competence and disability.
The design of the current study of adolescents is that of a randomized controlled trial
(RCT) with two parallel groups (control and experimental), with the question of the
independent variable 'group effect' on two dependent measures (adolescent physical growth
and cognitive development). In addition to group status, the contribution of four additional
independent measures on outcome will also be evaluated: Parent socioeconomic status, parent
cognitive function, adolescent physical function and adolescent psychosocial function. The
outcome examiners will be blind to subject group status throughout. The design assures a
true experimental test of the NICU intervention effects in adolescence.
The significance and importance of the study lays in the unique opportunity to evaluate
comprehensively in adolescents the long-term neurodevelopment, learning and adaptive
outcomes due to developmental care intervention received in the earliest stage of
development. This will be the first study to test the long-term effectiveness of
modification of experience in the NICU in a brain-protective, learning-enhancing model for
very high-risk, very early-born preterm infants. The importance of the study lies in its
potential to contribute significantly to the understanding of preterm brain development in
relationship to long-term mental and adaptive functional outcomes in adolescence for the
highly jeopardized and growing group of very preterm children. The results are expected to
be of key importance in decision and policy development for the evidence-based targeting of
sparse special education resources.
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