Peterson J, Smith D M, Johnstone E D, Harvey K, Mahaveer A
Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.
Perinatal Services, St Mary's Maternity Hospital, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, United Kingdom.
Front Pediatr. 2025 May 15;13:1552352. doi: 10.3389/fped.2025.1552352. eCollection 2025.
Advances in neonatal care have resulted in improved survival rates for periviable infants (22 + 0-23 + 6 weeks) with increasing numbers being admitted to neonatal intensive care units across the United Kingdom. Qualitative research evidences the conflict perinatal professionals experience traversing the line between providing life-sustaining treatment to these infants, whilst not wanting to inflict a prolonged period of suffering to infants who will ultimately die. Professionals currently lack adequate prognostic tools to accurately predict pre-birth which infants will survive.
This study utilises an anonymised dataset from the North West Neonatal Network to delineate time of death profiles for periviable infants admitted to neonatal intensive care units (NICU) and explores the demographics, timing and diagnoses recorded at the time of the death.
The data show that most periviable infants who died following admission to NICU died within the first seven days after birth [24 infants born at 22 weeks (65%) and 55 infants born at 23 weeks (52%)]. For infants born at 22 weeks who subsequently died on NICU, 89% had died within 14 days after birth. Reorientation of care was recorded as a relevant factor at the time of death in a minority of patients [23 infants (16%)].
Where active, survival-focused care has been initiated, the response of the infant to intensive care and the likelihood of their survival emerges over a relatively short timeframe after admission. This lends support to a trial of therapy approach for suitable periviable infants balancing the need to avoid iatrogenic harm to infants who will ultimately die despite intensive care, whilst not denying them the chance at survival. Management of periviable deliveries requires coordinated parallel planning and a high-quality palliative care approach throughout.
新生儿护理的进步使可存活早产儿(22+0至23+6周)的存活率得到提高,英国各地新生儿重症监护病房收治的此类婴儿数量不断增加。定性研究表明,围产期专业人员在为这些婴儿提供维持生命的治疗与不想给最终会死亡的婴儿造成长期痛苦之间存在冲突。专业人员目前缺乏足够的预后工具来准确预测出生前哪些婴儿能够存活。
本研究利用来自西北新生儿网络的匿名数据集,描绘入住新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)的可存活早产儿的死亡时间概况,并探讨死亡时记录的人口统计学、时间和诊断情况。
数据显示,大多数入住NICU后死亡的可存活早产儿在出生后的头七天内死亡[22周出生的婴儿中有24例(65%),23周出生的婴儿中有55例(52%)]。对于22周出生后在NICU死亡的婴儿,89%在出生后14天内死亡。少数患者(23例婴儿,16%)在死亡时记录了护理方向的转变。
在启动以存活为重点的积极护理的情况下,婴儿对重症监护的反应及其存活的可能性在入院后的相对短时间内就会显现出来。这支持了对合适的可存活早产儿采用试验性治疗方法,平衡避免对尽管接受重症监护最终仍会死亡的婴儿造成医源性伤害的需求,同时不剥夺他们的存活机会。对可存活早产儿分娩的管理需要全程协调并行规划和高质量的姑息治疗方法。