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- Eytan Kaplan, Ephraim Bar-Yishay, Dario Prais, Gil Klinger, Meir Mei-Zahav, Huda Mussaffi, Guy Steuer, Shai Hananya, Yelena Matyashuk, Nassrin Gabarra, Lea Sirota, and Hannah Blau.
- Pulmonary Institute, Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel, Petah Tikva, Israel.
- Chest. 2012 Sep 1;142(3):725-33.
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine the long-term pulmonary outcome of extreme prematurity at a single tertiary-care center from 1997 to 2001 in the postsurfactant era.MethodsWe assessed symptoms, exhaled nitric oxide, spirometry, methacholine challenge (provocative concentration of methacholine required to decrease FEV₁ by 20% [PC(20)]), lung volumes, diffusion, and cardiopulmonary exercise tolerance.ResultsOf 279 infants born, 192 survived to discharge, and 79 of these developed bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) (65 mild, 12 moderate, two severe). We studied a subgroup of 53 neurologically intact preterm subjects aged 10 ± 1.5 years (28 with BPD [born, 26.2 ± 1.4 weeks; birth weight, 821 ± 164 g] and 25 without BPD [born, 27.2 ± 1 weeks; birth weight, 1,050 ± 181 g]) and compared them with 23 term control subjects. Of the BPD cases, 21 were mild, seven were moderate, and none was severe; 77.4% of subjects received antenatal steroids, and 83% received postnatal surfactant. Sixty percent of the preterm subjects wheezed at age < 2 years compared with 13% of the control subjects (P < .001), but only 13% wheezed in the past year compared with 0% of control subjects (not significant). For preterm and control subjects, respectively (mean ± SD), FEV₁ % predicted was 85% ± 10% and 94% ± 10% (P < .001), with limited reversibility; residual volume/total lung capacity was 29.3% ± 5.5% and 25% ± 8% (P < .05); diffusing capacity/alveolar volume was 89.6% ± 9.2% and 97% ± 10% (P < .005); and PC(20) was 6.5 ± 5.8 mg/mL and 11.7 ± 5.5 mg/mL (P < .001). PC(20) was < 4 mg/mL in 49% of preterm subjects despite normal exhaled nitric oxide. Most measurements were similar in premature subjects with and without BPD. Peak oxygen consumption and breathing reserve were normal, but % predicted maximal load (measured in Watts) was 69% ± 15% for subjects with BPD compared with 88% ± 23% for subjects without and 86% ± 20% for control subjects (P < .01).ConclusionsPulmonary outcome was encouraging at mid-childhood for neurologically intact survivors in the postsurfactant era. Despite mechanical ventilation and oxygen therapy, most had no or mild BPD. Changes found probably reflect the hypoplastic lungs of prematurity.
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