Preterm neonatal survival: what is the role of prognostic
models?
Elizabeth M McClure, PhD1
Robert L Goldenberg, MD2
1Social, Statistical and Environmental Sciences, RTI
International, Durham, NC
2Columbia University, New York, NY
Even before the 1960’s and the introduction of the specialty of
neonatology, and continuing to the present, numerous efforts have been
made to understand the relationship between newborn birthweight and the
risk of mortality. (1) With the development of neonatal intensive care
units (NICUs), attention to survival rates and neurologic outcomes among
those at the lowest birthweights and gestational ages (GA) has grown.
(2) Defining the lower limits of GA or birthweight associated with the
neonatal outcomes is important for clinicians, families, and others to
inform appropriate decision-making and clinical care.
To predict newborn survival, numerous models have been developed to
estimate risk at specific birthweights and/or GAs. To date, more than 35
have been published, almost exclusively from high-income countries with
advanced NICU care. In a study published recently, van Beek et al sought
to validate one of these predictive models from the United Kingdom (UK),
deemed to be among the highest quality, with the objective of assessing
its value for clinical use. (3)
Van Beek et al used an independent Dutch population to validate survival
among very preterm infants using the UK model’s parameters. Because they
found relatively good performance, the authors’ concluded that the model
could inform daily clinical practice. However, the generalizability of
their results, especially to other populations differing by ethnicity or
socioeconomic status, is questionable. The parameters for the model
quality focused on birthweight, GA, and gender, but many other metrics
(including the racial diversity, quality of care, etc.) were limited. In
particular, the interventions available and utilized for obstetric and
neonatal care were not specified, which would be important for their
goal of clinical use of the model. Importantly, the quality of obstetric
care is not considered. (4) Both the availability and quality of
specific obstetric and neonatal interventions in any given setting may
be among the most important factors impacting survival.
Especially important for clinical considerations, long-term outcomes,
including severe disabilities, were not addressed. Concerns about
neurodevelopmental outcomes in infants at the lower limits of
birthweight and GA are as or more important to parents and caregivers
than survival. (5) It is thus unclear how this – or virtually any other
model - can be useful for “daily clinical practice”.
A better strategy to inform clinical care is for individual health-care
facilities to maintain neonatal survival and neurological outcome
statistics. These types of data within a specific context may be more
helpful to physicians, including obstetricians and neonatologists, who
often, together with parents and caregivers, make decisions related to
interventions prior to delivery or during NICU care. Newborn outcomes,
especially at the extreme lower limits of birthweight and GA, remains an
area of intense interest. While models may provide some supportive
information, it is difficult to imagine that these will ever replace
clinical decisions informed by actual outcome data from the specific
facility.
Conflicts of interest: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
References:
1. Goldenberg RL, Nelson KG, Dyer RL, Wayne JB. The variability of
viability: the effect of physicians’ perceptions of viability on the
survival of very low birth weight infants. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1982;
143:678-84.
2. Bottoms SF, Paul RH, Mercer BM, MacPherson CA, Caritis SN, Moawad AW.
Obstetric determinants
of neonatal survival: antenatal predictors of neonatal survival and
morbidity in extremely low birth weight infants. Am J Obstet Gynecol.
1999 80(3 Pt 1):665-9.
3. Van Beek P.E, Groenendaal F, Onland W, Koole S, Dijk PH, Dijkmanet KP
et al. Prognostic model for predicting survival in very preterm infants:
an external validation study. BJOG (in press)
4. Goepfert AR, Goldenberg RL, Hauth JC, Bottoms SF, Iams JD, Mercer BM
Obstetrical
determinants of neonatal neurological morbidity in < or =
1000-gram infants. Am J Perinatol. 1999;16(1):33-42.
5.
Iams
JD, Mercer BM.
National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Medicine
Units Network. What we have learned about antenatal prediction of
neonatal morbidity and mortality. Semin Perinatol 2003:247-52.