Haworth Edward J N, Tumbahangphe Kirti M, Costello Anthony, Manandhar Dharma, Adhikari Dhruba, Budhathoki Bharat, Shrestha Dej Krishna, Sagar Khadka, Heys Michelle
Great Ormond Street UCL Institute for Child Health, University College London, London, UK.
Mother and Infant Research Activities, Kathmandu, Nepal.
BMJ Glob Health. 2017 Aug 6;2(3):e000312. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000312. eCollection 2017.
Improving newborn health remains a global health priority. Little however is known about the neurodevelopmental consequences for survivors of complications in pregnancy, labour and the neonatal period in in low-income countries outside of small selective and typically urban facility studies. We ask which antenatal, birth and neonatal factors are associated with disability in childhood in a large community birth cohort from rural Nepal.
6436 infants were recruited during a cluster randomised control trial (RCT) of participatory women's groups (ISRCTN31137309), of whom 6075 survived beyond 28 days. At mean age of 11∙5 years (range 9.5-13.1), 4219 children (27% lost to follow-up) were available for disability screening which was conducted by face-to-face interview using the Module on Child Functioning and Disability produced by the Washington Group/UNICEF. Hypothesised risk factors for disability underwent multivariable regression modelling.
Overall prevalence of disability was 7.4%. Maternal underweight (OR 1.44 (95% CI 1.01-2.08)), maternal cohabitation under 16 years of age (OR 1.50 (1.13-2.00)), standardised infant weight at 1 month (OR 0.82 (0.71-0.95)) and reported infant diarrhoea and vomiting in the first month (OR 2.48 (1.58-3.89)) were significantly associated with disability adjusted for trial allocation. The majority of hypothesised risk factors, including prematurity, were not significant.
Proxies for early marriage and low birth weight and a measure of maternal undernutrition were associated with increased odds of disability. The lack of association of most other recognised risk factors for adverse outcome and disability may be due to survival bias.
改善新生儿健康仍是全球卫生工作的重点。然而,在低收入国家,除了小规模的选择性研究(通常是城市医疗机构研究)外,关于妊娠、分娩和新生儿期并发症幸存者的神经发育后果知之甚少。我们研究了尼泊尔农村一个大型社区出生队列中,哪些产前、出生和新生儿因素与儿童残疾有关。
在一项参与式妇女团体的整群随机对照试验(RCT)(ISRCTN31137309)中招募了6436名婴儿,其中6075名存活超过28天。在平均年龄11.5岁(范围9.5 - 13.1岁)时,4219名儿童(27%失访)可进行残疾筛查,通过使用华盛顿小组/联合国儿童基金会编制的儿童功能与残疾模块进行面对面访谈。对假设的残疾风险因素进行多变量回归建模。
残疾的总体患病率为7.4%。母亲体重过轻(比值比1.44(95%置信区间1.01 - 2.08))、母亲同居年龄不满16岁(比值比1.50(1.13 - 2.00))、1个月时的标准化婴儿体重(比值比0.82(0.71 - 0.95))以及报告的婴儿在第一个月出现腹泻和呕吐(比值比2.48(1.58 - 3.89))与根据试验分配调整后的残疾显著相关。大多数假设的风险因素,包括早产,并不显著。
早婚和低出生体重的替代指标以及母亲营养不良的一项指标与残疾几率增加有关。大多数其他公认的不良结局和残疾风险因素缺乏关联可能是由于生存偏差。