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Clinical therapeutics · May 2019
An Analysis of Time to Improvement in Oxygenation in Japanese Preterm and Late Preterm or Term Neonates With Hypoxic Respiratory Failure and Pulmonary Hypertension.
- William D Rhine, Satoshi Suzuki, Jim L Potenziano, Shannon Escalante, and Hajime Togari.
- Department of Pediatrics-Neonatology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, USA. Electronic address: wrhine@stanford.edu.
- Clin Ther. 2019 May 1; 41 (5): 910-919.
PurposeWe analyzed data from an ongoing registry to determine time to improvement in oxygenation in preterm and late preterm or term neonates with hypoxic respiratory failure and pulmonary hypertension receiving inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) in Japan.MethodsRegistry neonates received iNO ≤7 days after birth (February 26, 2010, to October 9, 2012). Efficacy and safety profile data were collected up to 96 h after iNO initiation and, if necessary, every 24 h thereafter and before iNO discontinuation. Patients were stratified by gestational age (GA), oxygenation index (OI), and shunt direction at baseline.FindingsData were evaluated for 1106 neonates (431 with a GA <34 weeks and 675 with a GA of ≥34 weeks). Sixty percent of patients had improved OI; rates were similar for those with GAs of <34 versus ≥34 weeks (61% vs 59%). Overall, mean time to improvement was 11.4 h and tended to be shorter in the groups with a GA <34 weeks versus ≥34 weeks (9.2 vs 12.9 h). Thirty percent of responding neonates required >1 h to achieve improvement in oxygenation. Neonates with higher baseline OI had the greatest decrease in OI during the first hour of treatment. The mortality rate was higher among iNO-treated patients with a baseline OI ≥25 versus those with OI ≥15 to <25 (25% vs 12%; P = 0.0073).ImplicationsiNO treatment provided acute, sustained improvement in oxygenation in neonates with GAs <34 and ≥34 weeks; 70% of patients had improvement within 1 h, but the remaining 30% took >1 h to respond. Initiation of iNO at lower OIs was associated with reduced mortality compared with higher OI.Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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