Cornelissen Laura, Coffman Siobhan, Kim Isabelle, Underwood Ellen, Tao Alice, Maloney Maria G, Donado Carolina, Lobo Kimberly, Nelson Charles A, Hensch Takao K, Gabard-Durnam Laurel J, Berde Charles B
Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center, Department of Neurology, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
BJA Open. 2025 Mar 10;14:100383. doi: 10.1016/j.bjao.2025.100383. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Effects of early and prolonged exposure to general anaesthesia on the developing brain are unclear. The study objective was to examine developmental outcomes at 10 months and 2-3 yr of age after general anaesthesia planned for >2 h in the first 2 months of life.
This is a secondary analysis of the General Anaesthesia & Brain Activity (GABA) study-a prospective, single-centre, longitudinal observational study. The final dataset included 59 children who were unexposed and 31 children who were exposed to early prolonged general anaesthesia who completed the primary outcome measure, Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development-III (BSID) assessments at 10 months, at 2-3 yr old, or both. Analyses used adjusted Welch's -tests, linear regression, and linear mixed effects models.
BSID composite scores for cognition were similar between general anaesthesia and unexposed cohorts at 10 months ( =0.566, standardised mean difference [SMD]=0.27) and at 2-3 yr ( =0.651, SMD=0.25). Motor and language scores were similar between cohorts at 10 months (motor: =1, SMD=0.13; language: =0.806, SMD=0.19) and fell within typical reference ranges. Linear regression analysis found no association between BSID cognition scores and cumulative hours of general anaesthesia at 10 months (=0.06, =0.635) or at 2-3 yr (=-0.13, =0.293).
Children with early prolonged general anaesthesia showed BSID scores comparable to age-matched controls. This analysis provides additional preliminary support for the safety of general anaesthesia on the developing brain even when general anaesthesia is prolonged, repeated, or administered very early in life.
早期和长期暴露于全身麻醉对发育中大脑的影响尚不清楚。本研究的目的是在出生后头两个月计划进行超过2小时全身麻醉后,检查10个月和2至3岁时的发育结局。
这是对全身麻醉与脑活动(GABA)研究的二次分析——一项前瞻性、单中心、纵向观察性研究。最终数据集包括59名未暴露于全身麻醉的儿童和31名暴露于早期长期全身麻醉的儿童,他们完成了主要结局指标,即10个月、2至3岁或两个年龄段的贝利婴幼儿发育量表第三版(BSID)评估。分析采用了校正后的韦尔奇t检验、线性回归和线性混合效应模型。
全身麻醉组和未暴露组在10个月时的BSID认知综合得分相似(P = 0.566,标准化平均差[SMD]=0.27),在2至3岁时也相似(P = 0.651,SMD = 0.25)。两组在10个月时的运动和语言得分相似(运动:P = 1,SMD = 0.13;语言:P = 0.806,SMD = 0.19),且均在典型参考范围内。线性回归分析发现,10个月时(P = 0.06,R² = 0.635)或2至3岁时(P = -0.13,R² = 0.293),BSID认知得分与全身麻醉累计时长之间无关联。
早期长期接受全身麻醉的儿童的BSID得分与年龄匹配的对照组相当。该分析为全身麻醉对发育中大脑的安全性提供了额外的初步支持,即使全身麻醉是长期的、反复的或在生命早期进行的。