Abstract

Purpose: to evaluate if multiple courses of antenatal corticosteroids are more effective than single ones to reduce morbidity and mortality of preterm infants. Methods: retrospective study of 184 newborns with gestational age less than 34 weeks from a tertiary-level hospital in Sao Paulo from January 1988 to December 1998. The patients were divided into two groups: single course (n=135) - newborns whose mothers were exposed to a complete single course (2 doses of betamethasone or 4 doses of dexamethasone between 24 h and 7 days prior to delivery); multiple courses (n=49) - newborns whose mothers were exposed to two or more complete courses. The primary clinical outcomes for the two groups were: frequency of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), intra-hospital mortality and combined neonatal morbidity (including the presence of the following: RDS, peri-intraventricular hemorrhage, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis or intra-hospital death). Numerical data were compared by Student's t test or Mann-Whitney test and categorical data by c2 or Fisher exact test, with the odds ratio and its confidence interval. Results: there were no differences between the groups that received single or multiple courses of antenatal corticosteroids in regard to the occurrence of RDS (single course: 22% and multiple course: 18%), intra-hospital mortality (single course 18% and multiple 12%) and combined neonatal morbidity (single course 62% and multiple 63%). Conclusions: multiple courses of antenatal corticosteroids did not reduce the morbidity and mortality of preterm infants. This study emphasizes the present guidelines that recommend the use of one single course of corticosteroid for fetal maturation in pregnant women at risk for preterm delivery.

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