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American Academy of Pediatrics
Article

A Three-day Course of Dexamethasone Therapy to Prevent Chronic Lung Disease in Ventilated Neonates: A Randomized Trial

Jeffery S. Garland, Colleen P. Alex, Thomas H. Pauly, Vicki L. Whitehead, Joseph Brand, James F. Winston, David P. Samuels and Timothy L. McAuliffe
Pediatrics July 1999, 104 (1) 91-99; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.104.1.91
Jeffery S. Garland
From the Departments of Pediatrics at *St Joseph's Hospital, Milwaukee, Wisconsin;
‡St Mary's Hospital, Milwaukee, Wisconsin;
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Colleen P. Alex
From the Departments of Pediatrics at *St Joseph's Hospital, Milwaukee, Wisconsin;
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Thomas H. Pauly
§University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky;
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Vicki L. Whitehead
§University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky;
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Joseph Brand
‖St Vincent Hospital, Green Bay, Wisconsin; and the
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James F. Winston
‖St Vincent Hospital, Green Bay, Wisconsin; and the
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David P. Samuels
‖St Vincent Hospital, Green Bay, Wisconsin; and the
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Timothy L. McAuliffe
¶Division of Biostatistics at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
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Abstract

Background. Although several trials of early dexamethasone therapy have been completed to determine if such therapy would reduce mortality and chronic lung disease (CLD) in infants with respiratory distress, optimal duration and side effects of such therapy remain unknown.

Purpose. The purpose of this study was: 1) to determine if a 3-day course of early dexamethasone therapy would reduce CLD and increase survival without CLD in neonates who received surfactant therapy for respiratory distress syndrome and 2) to determine adverse effects associated with such therapy.

Design. This was a prospective multicenter randomized trial comparing a 3-day course of dexamethasone therapy beginning at 24 to 48 hours of life to placebo therapy. Two hundred forty-one neonates (dexamethasone n = 118, placebon = 123), who weighed between 500 g and 1500 g, received surfactant therapy, and were at significant risk for CLD or death using a model to predict CLD or death at 24 hours of life, were enrolled in the trial. Infants randomized to receive early dexamethasone were given 6 doses of dexamethasone at 12-hour intervals beginning at 24 to 48 hours of life. The primary outcomes compared were survival without CLD and CLD. CLD was defined by the need for supplemental oxygen at the gestational age of 36 weeks. Complication rates and adverse effects of study drug therapy were also compared.

Results. Neonates randomized to early dexamethasone treatment were more likely to survive without CLD (RR: 1.3; 95% CI: 1.03, 1.7) and were less likely to develop CLD (RR: 0.6; CI: 0.3, 0.98). Mortality rates were not significantly different. Subsequent dexamethasone therapy use was less in early dexamethasone-treated neonates (RR: 0.8; CI: 0.7, 0.96). Very early (≤7 days of life) intestinal perforations were more common among dexamethasone-treated neonates (8% vs 1%).

Conclusion. We conclude that an early 3-day course of dexamethasone therapy increases survival without CLD, reduces CLD, and reduces late dexamethasone therapy in high-risk, low birth weight infants who receive surfactant therapy for respiratory distress syndrome. Potential benefits of early dexamethasone therapy at the dosing schedule used in this trial need to be weighed against the risk for early intestinal perforation.

  • low birth weight infants
  • respiratory distress syndrome
  • dexamethasone
  • chronic lung disease
  • Received October 23, 1998.
  • Accepted April 7, 1999.
  • Copyright © 1999 American Academy of Pediatrics

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Pediatrics
Vol. 104, Issue 1
1 Jul 1999
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A Three-day Course of Dexamethasone Therapy to Prevent Chronic Lung Disease in Ventilated Neonates: A Randomized Trial
Jeffery S. Garland, Colleen P. Alex, Thomas H. Pauly, Vicki L. Whitehead, Joseph Brand, James F. Winston, David P. Samuels, Timothy L. McAuliffe
Pediatrics Jul 1999, 104 (1) 91-99; DOI: 10.1542/peds.104.1.91

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A Three-day Course of Dexamethasone Therapy to Prevent Chronic Lung Disease in Ventilated Neonates: A Randomized Trial
Jeffery S. Garland, Colleen P. Alex, Thomas H. Pauly, Vicki L. Whitehead, Joseph Brand, James F. Winston, David P. Samuels, Timothy L. McAuliffe
Pediatrics Jul 1999, 104 (1) 91-99; DOI: 10.1542/peds.104.1.91
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