Abstract

We assessed variability of analgesic use across three tertiary neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) accounting for early-life pain, quantified as number of invasive procedures. We also determined whether analgesia exposure modifies associations between early-life pain and neurodevelopment. Multicenter prospective study of 276 very preterm infants (born <24-32 weeks' gestational age [GA]). Detailed data of number of invasive procedures and duration of analgesia exposure were collected in initial weeks after birth. Eighteen-month neurodevelopmental assessments were completed in 215 children with Bayley Scales for Infant Development-Third edition. Multivariable linear regressions revealed significant differences in morphine use across sites, for a given exposure to early-life pain (interaction p < 0.001). Associations between early-life pain and motor scores differed by duration of morphine exposure (interaction p = 0.01); greater early-life pain was associated with poorer motor scores in infants with no or long (>7 days) exposure, but not short exposure (≤7 days). Striking cross-site differences in morphine exposure in very preterm infants are observed even when accounting for early-life pain. Negative associations between greater early-life pain and adverse motor outcomes were attenuated in infants with short morphine exposure. These findings emphasize the need for further studies of optimal analgesic approaches in preterm infants. In very preterm neonates, both early-life exposure to pain and analgesia are associated with adverse neurodevelopment and altered brain maturation, with no clear guidelines for neonatal pain management in this population. We found significant cross-site variability in morphine use across three tertiary neonatal intensive care units in Canada. Morphine use modified associations between early-life pain and motor outcomes. In infants with no or long durations of morphine exposure, greater early-life pain was associated with lower motor scores, this relationship was attenuated in those with short morphine exposure. Further trials of optimal treatment approaches with morphine in preterm infants are warranted.

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