The team examined data from 65 studies focused on the most
vulnerable preemies - those born between 22 and 27 weeks gestation -
to see how many survived and how many had severe physical or mental
impairments by the time they were 18 to 36 months old.
As a proportion of all deliveries including stillbirths, virtually
no babies born at 22 weeks survive. And among only the live births
at this very early stage, just 7.3 percent of babies survive. But
survival rates surge to 24 percent for the subset of these babies
who can be admitted to neonatal intensive care units (NICUs).
In contrast, 82 percent of all babies delivered at 27 weeks live,
with the survival odds rising to 90 percent for those admitted to
NICUs, the study team reports in Pediatrics.
More time in the womb also increases babies' odds of survival
without severe impairments: at 22 weeks, just 1.2 percent of babies
born alive are free of major impairments, but this rises to 64
percent of infants who arrive at 27 weeks.
"Except for infants approaching the limit of viability around 22-24
weeks, most of them survive without major impairments," said senior
study author Dr. Trond Markestad of the University of Bergen in
Norway.
"Most major impairments, i.e. cerebral palsy, severe sensory
(vision, hearing) impairment and mental retardation are discovered
at 3 years of age," Markestad said by email. "But we know that less
severe mental and physical impairments, such as significant
learning, behavioral and attention difficulties and clumsiness that
are not detected at 3 years are common among school children born
very and extremely preterm, and again, in particular when
approaching the limit of viability."
The study only focused on babies born in high-income countries where
more mothers might have access to prenatal care and more infants
might have access to NICUs and advanced medical technology.
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Pregnancy normally lasts about 40 weeks, and babies born after 37
weeks are considered full-term. In the weeks after birth, preemies
often have difficulty breathing and digesting food, and their
survival odds can depend very much on the availability of effective
lung treatments, intravenous nutrition and pumped breast milk.
For the study, researchers focused on babies born between 2000 and
2017. Most advances in breathing and nutrition support happened
before this time period.
This may explain why there was little change in survival odds based
on when during the study period babies were born, Markestad said.
The smaller studies in the analysis were not designed to prove
whether or how preterm births might determine survival odds or the
chance of severe impairments. It's also likely that results would
look much different in the developing world.
The NICU makes a big difference, said Dr. Aijaz Farooqi, a
pediatrics researcher at Umea University Hospital in Sweden, who
wasn't involved in the study.
"Although survival rates for babies born at 22 and 23 weeks are
steadily improving at centers that offer active treatment to these
babies, many centers do not offer active treatment," Farooqi said by
email.
"Interventions that might be effective can be started very early in
the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) or nursery, and when
possible skin-to skin care is beneficial for both parents and
infants," Farooqi added. "Breast milk and optimal nutrition has
shown to be beneficial, and after babies leave the hospital, parents
can support development by encouraging movement and play with other
kids, as well as by reading and speaking to them often."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2ToApBr Pediatrics, online January 31, 2019.
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