Christoffel Kelsey, Mulkey Sarah B
Zickler Family Prenatal Pediatrics Institute, Children's National Hospital, Washington, DC, USA.
Department of Neurology, The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC, USA.
Pediatr Res. 2025 Jun 4. doi: 10.1038/s41390-025-04156-0.
In the era of therapeutic hypothermia (TH), more infants are surviving moderate to severe hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) with no or less apparent injury on neonatal brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Despite a reduction in death and severe neurodisability for infants with neonatal encephalopathy from HIE, children remain at risk for challenges in learning, language, coordination, behavior, and socioemotional development. Neither neonatal MRI nor early developmental testing is completely predictive of outcomes at school age. This review summarizes current data on long-term outcomes of infants who have received TH for HIE, most in the absence of cerebral palsy or significant neonatal brain injury. Many children with a history of neonatal HIE face challenges in their motor skills, emotion regulation and behavior, language and communication, cognition and learning, and academic achievement. All children with a history of neonatal HIE can benefit from close neurodevelopmental surveillance into adolescence. It is important for providers to counsel families about the spectrum of long-term outcomes and potential effects on later stages of neurodevelopment even when brain MRI is reassuring. Understanding the broader spectrum of neurodevelopmental impairment at school-age in children with neonatal HIE can inform new therapies, early intervention strategies, and pre-school readiness to optimize outcomes. IMPACT STATEMENT: Children with a history of moderate to severe hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) without evidence of significant brain injury on post-cooling neonatal MRI are still at risk for a range of neurodevelopmental challenges at school-age and beyond. Neonatal neuroimaging and early neurodevelopmental evaluations do not reliably indicate outcomes at school-age, making early prognostication and counseling families in the NICU period and during neonatal follow-up clinics challenging. All children with perinatal HIE, regardless of MRI findings, should have long-term follow up and support through school age.
在治疗性低温(TH)时代,越来越多的中度至重度缺氧缺血性脑病(HIE)婴儿存活下来,新生儿脑磁共振成像(MRI)显示无明显损伤或损伤较轻。尽管HIE所致新生儿脑病婴儿的死亡和严重神经残疾有所减少,但儿童在学习、语言、协调、行为和社会情感发展方面仍面临挑战。新生儿MRI和早期发育测试都不能完全预测学龄期的结局。本综述总结了接受TH治疗的HIE婴儿的长期结局的现有数据,大多数婴儿没有脑瘫或明显的新生儿脑损伤。许多有新生儿HIE病史的儿童在运动技能、情绪调节与行为、语言与交流、认知与学习以及学业成绩方面面临挑战。所有有新生儿HIE病史的儿童都能从密切的神经发育监测中受益,直至青春期。即使脑MRI结果令人放心,告知家长长期结局的范围以及对神经发育后期的潜在影响对医疗服务提供者来说也很重要。了解新生儿HIE儿童学龄期更广泛的神经发育障碍情况可为新疗法、早期干预策略和学前准备提供参考,以优化结局。影响声明:有中度至重度缺氧缺血性脑病(HIE)病史且降温后新生儿MRI无明显脑损伤证据的儿童在学龄期及以后仍面临一系列神经发育挑战的风险。新生儿神经影像学和早期神经发育评估不能可靠地预测学龄期结局,这使得在新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)期间和新生儿随访门诊对患儿进行早期预后评估并向家长提供咨询具有挑战性。所有围产期HIE患儿,无论MRI结果如何,都应进行长期随访并在学龄期得到支持。