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Steph Borg 17 May 2012

SCH Medics Journal Club Unexpected collapse in apparently healthy newborns – a prospective study of a missing cohort of neonatal deaths and near death events. Steph Borg 17 May 2012. SUPC is rare in infants How often does it occur? What are the causes? Jessop guidelines include

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Steph Borg 17 May 2012

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  1. SCH Medics Journal ClubUnexpected collapse in apparently healthy newborns – a prospective study of a missing cohort of neonatal deaths and near death events Steph Borg 17 May 2012

  2. SUPC is rare in infants • How often does it occur? • What are the causes? • Jessop guidelines include • Immediate care of the newborn • Bed sharing and co-sleeping guideine

  3. Search Sudden OR unexpected AND Neonatal OR postnatal AND Collapse or death Limit to English Language and humans and age <1 month 199 results

  4. Result Unexpected collapse in apparently healthy newborns – a prospective study of a missing cohort of neonatal deaths and near death event J-C Becher, S Bhushan & A Lyon Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed 2012 97:F30-F34

  5. Analysis

  6. Analysis “We sought to establish the population incidence of sudden unexpected postnatal collapse (SUPC) in apparently healthy infants within the UK to describe situational factors and the cause for collapse was determined” • Population – • infants ≥37/40 • Apgar score of ≥ 8 at 5mins • Collapse within 12hrs of birth in hospital requiring resuscitation with PPV and died or received ongoing intensive care

  7. Analysis • Risk factors • Maternal sedation • Breastfeeding/prone position • Unattended • Underlying disease/pathology • Outcomes • Incidence of death and collapse • Identification of cause of death • Neurological follow up at 1 year

  8. Analysis • Yes • A method of establishing an association between exposure and outcome by following a population over time

  9. Analysis • Cases referred to BPSU over 13 months 2008-2009 • Active surveillance via network of 3000 paediatricians • Response rate 94.6% • When cases identified further information collected from clinicians • Could not verify if all cases reported • Study incidence may be underestimate

  10. Analysis Exposure to risk factors identified retrospectively from BPSU collected data Ix performed decided by clinical time at the time – not consistent Cases were anonymised to study team

  11. Analysis

  12. Analysis • Study incidence may be underestimated • 4 excluded cases due to uncertain eligibility • Ix to cause of collapse not always successful • 1 death – no cause found and no PM • 5 cases no cause identified • Clinical judgment of cause where no objective cause identified • Outcome data for all surviving cases available

  13. All infants surviving to discharge followed up at 1 yr with neurological assessment • Is age 1 yr too early to assess for long term developmental/neurological outcome?

  14. Results • 91 cases referred, • 32 errors • 10 duplications • 4 excluded • 45 infants of SUPC included • 12 (27%) died • 33 survived to discharge • Population incidence of SUPC in first 12 hours 0.05/1000 (1 in 19000) term live births • Mortality 0.01/1000 (1/72000) term live births • Where no underlying disease or abnormality id’d population incidence 0.035/1000 (1/29000) term live births

  15. Results • Characteristics of mother, labour and delivery • Infants with an underlying condition (n=15) • 10 (67%) primiparous • Non smokers and healthy • 6 SVD, 3 instrumental, 6 LSCS • Infants without an underlying condition (n=30) • 23 (77%) primiparous • 2 smokers, 4 PIH, 8 health professionals

  16. Results • Characteristics of infant • 22 (49%) male • Mean gestational age 40/40 (range 37-42 weeks) • Mean birthweight 3328g (range 2260g-4030g) • Apgar of 8 or above at 5 mins • Routine postnatal care

  17. Results – causes of collapse

  18. Results – Following collapse • All infants required PPV • 22 received CPR • 10 received resuscitation drugs • 2 died immediately • 1 sepsis • 1 TGA • 43 admitted to neonatal unit • Median pH within 1 hr 6.98 ( IQR 6.8-7.18) • Median base deficit 17.7mmol/l (IQR 11.4-23.5) • 23 multiorgan dysfunction • 17 single organ dysfunction

  19. Results – infants w/o underlying condition

  20. Results - deaths • 12/45 infants died • 10/12 underwent postmortem • Underlying cause found in 5 (50%) • 2 sepsis; TGA; unidentified metabolic condition; parvovirus • No underlying cause found • Apparent asphyxiation as per pathologist/clinician • 2/10 no PM • hyoplastic left heart on echo pre mortem • collapse following presumed suffocation – consent for PM not given

  21. Results - survivors • 33/45 survived to discharge • 8 (24%) neurological abnormalities at 1yr f/u • 3 had underlying cause for collapse identified • Zellweger’s syndrome • Cerebral infarction • Culture negative sepsis

  22. Results – survivors • 30 infants with no underlying cause/disease • 19/24 presumed accidental suffocation survived to discharge • 5 had neurological abnormality at 1 yr f/u • 3 with cerebral palsy • 1 with probable cerebral palsy • 1 with mild global delay and hypotonia • 6 infants with no cause identified normal at follow up • (but 1 died..)

  23. Results There is no statistical analysis in this study

  24. Results Results as accurate as medical records kept Clinical decisions on cause of collapse may be subjective 6/45 infants no cause for collapse identified

  25. Will the results help me locally • Yes – Jessop provides care to term babies with Apgars >8 at 5 mins • Currently have pathways in our guidelines re • Co-sleeping and bed sharing • Prevention, detection and management of known risks of hypoglycaemia, GBS

  26. The first study to document the population incidence in the UK of SUPC in infants assessed as being healthy at birth Previous case series document risks of accidental suffocation

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