Respiratory consequences of prematurity: evolution of a diagnosis and development of a comprehensive approach

Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is the most common respiratory consequence of premature birth and contributes to significant short- and long-term morbidity, mortality and resource utilization. Initially defined as a radiographic, clinical and histopathological entity, the chronic lung disease known...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of perinatology 2015-05, Vol.35 (5), p.313-321
Hauptverfasser: Maitre, N L, Ballard, R A, Ellenberg, J H, Davis, S D, Greenberg, J M, Hamvas, A, Pryhuber, G S
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 313
container_title Journal of perinatology
container_volume 35
creator Maitre, N L
Ballard, R A
Ellenberg, J H
Davis, S D
Greenberg, J M
Hamvas, A
Pryhuber, G S
description Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is the most common respiratory consequence of premature birth and contributes to significant short- and long-term morbidity, mortality and resource utilization. Initially defined as a radiographic, clinical and histopathological entity, the chronic lung disease known as BPD has evolved as obstetrical and neonatal care have improved the survival of lower gestational age infants. Now, definitions based on the need for supplementary oxygen at 28 days and/or 36 weeks provide a useful reference point in the neonatal intensive-care unit (NICU), but are no longer based on histopathological findings, and are neither designed to predict longer term respiratory consequences nor to study the evolution of a multifactorial disease. The aims of this review are to critically examine the evolution of the diagnosis of BPD and the challenges inherent to current classifications. We found that the increasing use of respiratory support strategies that administer ambient air without supplementary oxygen confounds oxygen-based definitions of BPD. Furthermore, lack of reproducible, genetic, biochemical and physiological biomarkers limits the ability to identify an impending BPD for early intervention, quantify disease severity for standardized classification and approaches and reliably predict the long-term outcomes. More comprehensive, multidisciplinary approaches to overcome these challenges involve longitudinal observation of extremely preterm infants, not only those with BPD, using genetic, environmental, physiological and clinical data as well as large databases of patient samples. The Prematurity and Respiratory Outcomes Program (PROP) will provide such a framework to address these challenges through high-resolution characterization of both NICU and post-NICU discharge outcomes.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/jp.2015.19
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Initially defined as a radiographic, clinical and histopathological entity, the chronic lung disease known as BPD has evolved as obstetrical and neonatal care have improved the survival of lower gestational age infants. Now, definitions based on the need for supplementary oxygen at 28 days and/or 36 weeks provide a useful reference point in the neonatal intensive-care unit (NICU), but are no longer based on histopathological findings, and are neither designed to predict longer term respiratory consequences nor to study the evolution of a multifactorial disease. The aims of this review are to critically examine the evolution of the diagnosis of BPD and the challenges inherent to current classifications. We found that the increasing use of respiratory support strategies that administer ambient air without supplementary oxygen confounds oxygen-based definitions of BPD. 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subjects 692/699/1785
Biomarkers
Birth size
Birth weight
Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia - diagnosis
Care and treatment
Diagnosis
Dysplasia
Evolution
Gestational Age
Humans
Infant, Extremely Premature
Infant, Newborn
Infants
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
Lung diseases
Measurement
Medical diagnosis
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Morbidity
Neonates
Oxygen
Pediatric Surgery
Pediatrics
Physiology
Pregnancy
Premature birth
Resource utilization
Respiratory tract infections
Risk Factors
state-of-the-art
title Respiratory consequences of prematurity: evolution of a diagnosis and development of a comprehensive approach
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