AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS |
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND |
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The survival rate for infants born from 22 to 25 weeks of gestation increases with each additional week of gestation.1,2 However, the incidence of moderate or severe neurodevelopmental disability in surviving children assessed at the age of 18 to 30 months is high (approximately 30%50%) and does not appear to decrease over the 23- to 25-week gestation period.29 Many of these infants require prolonged intensive and long-term care. The commitment for all aspects of care may be extensive, multidisciplinary, lifelong, and costly. Because the families bear the emotional and financial consequences of the birth of an extremely preterm infant, it is essential to inform the prospective parents regarding the expectations for infant survival and outcome and the risks and benefits of various approaches to care.
| COUNSELING REGARDING POTENTIAL FETAL OUTCOMES |
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Neonatal survival rates based on birth weight and gestational age from 2 large studies in the last decade are provided in Table 1 .1,2 These rates do not represent ultimate survival rates, because deaths may occur in the postneonatal period (the postneonatal mortality rate for this group of infants is <3%). The prevalence of a number of neonatal morbidities common to these extremely preterm infants is shown in Table 2 .1
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The best estimate of gestational age before preterm delivery is often well established and becomes the main basis for subsequent decision making. Clinical assessment to determine gestational age usually is appropriate for the woman with regular menstrual cycles and a known last menstrual period that was confirmed by an early examination. Fetal measurements derived through the use of ultrasonography at the time of anticipated delivery should not be used to alter estimated gestational age unless there is a discrepancy of 2 weeks or more between the age derived by menstrual dating and the age derived sonographically or the woman is uncertain about the date of her last menstrual period. Ultrasonography may provide useful information regarding the presence or absence of fetal malformations that may alter the prognosis. The accuracy of sonographic measurements and the ability to ascertain malformations, however, may be decreased in the presence of oligohydramnios, such as occurs with ruptured membranes.
Using sonographic weight estimate to assess risk is confounded by the inclusion of infants who are gestationally more mature but growth restricted.1213 Even in ideal circumstances, the 95% confidence limits for a formula-based estimate of fetal weight are plus or minus 15% to 20%.14 Thus, an infant estimated to weigh 600 g may have an actual birth weight of less than 500 g or more than 700 g. Even relatively small discrepancies of 1 or 2 weeks in gestational age or 100 to 200 g in birth weight may have major implications for survival and long-term morbidity. This underscores the importance of counseling about the range of possible outcomes. Multiple gestation increases the difficulty of accurate ultrasonic gestational age assessment, and the prognosis for one infant may differ from that of the other(s). Gender and gestational age significantly affect the likelihood of survival for infants weighing less than 750 g. In one large cohort of infants weighing less than 1500 g at birth,1 a birth weight of 600 g was associated with a survival rate ranging from approximately 15% for a male of 22 weeks gestational age to 65% for a female of 25 weeks gestational age. Similarly, at 23 weeks gestation, the survival rate ranged from approximately 20% for a male weighing 520 g to 60% for a female weighing 740 g.
Obstetric and neonatal physicians, primary care physicians, and other appropriate staff should confer to ensure that consistent and accurate information is provided to the parents. The range of possible outcomes and management options for the mother can then be outlined to the family. If maternal transport is to be considered, the obstetrician should be knowledgeable about the available regional resources and be prepared to provide information to the parents. More detailed counseling can then be accomplished at the receiving unit. Additional input from other important sources, such as clergy, social workers, and the institutions bioethics committee, may be offered to the parents. Counseling should be sensitive to cultural and ethnic diversity, and a skilled translator should be available for parents whose primary language differs from the language of the care providers. It should be emphasized that there is some uncertainty with any predictive process, because every infant is unique. The prognosis for the fetus may change after birth, when a more accurate assessment of the gestational age and actual condition can be made. Ongoing risk assessment must be individualized depending on the infants subsequent course and response to treatment.15
| COUNSELING REGARDING THE RISKS AND BENEFITS OF MANAGEMENT OPTIONS |
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Some decisions, such as the choice of cesarean birth, can result in an increased risk of morbidity to the woman. Few studies have been performed to evaluate the influence of obstetric management on the outcome of infants at the threshold of viability. Furthermore, literature on this subject is largely retrospective and often lacks sufficient data regarding potential confounding variables. Despite these limitations, study results have consistently failed to document benefits of cesarean delivery for extremely preterm infants.17,18 It has even been difficult to document improved outcome with cesarean birth for infants in the breech position who are extremely preterm.19,20 However, in one study, the opinion of the obstetrician regarding the potential viability of an extremely preterm fetus, as measured by the willingness to perform cesarean delivery, was found to have a major impact on the likelihood of survival of the fetus to birth.21
Physicians should avoid characterizing managements of uncertain benefit as "doing everything possible" or "doing nothing" so as not to place a value on the judgment. Rather, they should hold discussions with the family regarding available data and provide an explanation of the risks incurred by management options, including route of delivery. In the case of cesarean delivery, risks to the woman include not only those incurred during the perioperative period but also long-term implications for childbearing, because a vertical uterine incision is often made. A vertical uterine incision at these gestational ages may extend into the fundus, thus precluding the option of vaginal birth in a future pregnancy. Counseling regarding management decisions, such as whether to use maternal transport, should include a discussion of the potential disadvantages of separating the mother from supportive family members and familiar caregivers when benefit for the mother or infant is uncertain versus potential advantages of ensuring that the infant is delivered in a setting with maximum expertise in caring for an extremely preterm infant should the infant be more mature and/or larger than anticipated.
Neonatal Management
Decisions regarding the extent of resuscitative efforts and subsequent support of the neonate are complex and often involve ethical considerations.2225 The Textbook of Neonatal Resuscitation, 4th edition, suggests that noninitiation of resuscitation for newborns of less than 23 weeks gestational age and/or 400 g in birth weight is appropriate.26 Parents should be counseled that decisions about viability and neonatal management made before delivery may need to be altered in the delivery room and beyond depending on the condition of the neonate at birth, the postnatal gestational age assessment, and the infants response to resuscitative and stabilization measures. Decisions regarding the extent of continuing support require frequent reevaluations of the infants condition and prognosis15,23 and reconsideration with the parents.
When a decision is made to withhold resuscitation, discontinue resuscitation, or forgo other life-supporting treatments, the family should be treated with compassion, focusing on their needs. Humane and compassionate care must be provided to the nonviable or dying infant and the family. This includes careful handling, maintaining warmth, avoidance of invasive procedures, and unobtrusive monitoringsometimes called "comfort care."
When medical support is discontinued or death is inevitable, time and opportunity should be provided for the parents and other family members to hold, touch, and interact with the infant before and after the infant dies. Simple personalizing acts, such as naming the infant; obtaining a photograph, footprint sheet, crib card, name band, or even a lock of hair; and recording birth weight and other measurements may be important to the parents and should be provided. Clergy and supportive family and friends should be encouraged to have access to the infant in a setting that maintains dignity.
Support should be provided to the family by physicians, nurses, and other staff beyond the time of the infants death. This may include referral to perinatal loss support groups, repeated telephone contact, other simple acts of condolence, and a conference with the family to review the medical events surrounding the infants death and to evaluate the grieving response of the parents.
FUTURE INVESTIGATION
There is a continuing need for additional investigations into the prevention of preterm birth, the treatment of preterm labor, life support of the extremely preterm infant, and the impact of obstetric and neonatal management on the survival potential, short-term morbidities, and long-term disability rates of extremely preterm/extremely low birth weight infants. In addition, studies of optimal counseling and bereavement management and the societal impact of extremely preterm births would enhance support of families. Continued research on this subset of pregnancies and infants by multicenter trials with reliable and validated methods of data collection and analysis and long-term follow-up of the survivors is imperative to provide an improved basis for ongoing assessment and decision making for physicians and families.
| SUMMARY |
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| Committee on Fetus and Newborn, 20022003 |
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Daniel G. Batton, MD
Edward F. Bell, MD
William A. Engle, MD
William P. Kanto, Jr, MD
Gilbert I. Martin, MD
Warren N. Rosenfeld, MD
Ann R. Stark, MD
Hugh McDonald, MD
Past Committee Member
| Liaisons |
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Canadian Paediatric Society
Jenny Ecord, MS, RNC, NNP, PNP
American Nurses Association, Association of Womens Health, Obstetric, and Neonatal Nurses National Association of Neonatal Nurses
Solomon Iyasu, MBBS, MPH
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Laura E. Riley, MD
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
Linda L. Wright, MD
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
| Staff |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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All clinical reports from the American Academy of Pediatrics automatically expire 5 years after publication unless reaffirmed, revised, or retired at or before that time.
| REFERENCES |
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The following policy statement has been revised:
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