Abstract

AbstractObjectiveCurrent international guidelines on neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) recommend continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) stabilization as primary treatment. Some guidelines recommend surfactant replacement for babies requiring FiO2 > 0.3 regardless of gestational age (GA). We explore the accuracy of alternative inspired oxygen fraction (FiO2) thresholds as early predictors of surfactant replacement in babies stratified by GA.Study DesignPragmatic, observational study in 12 Italian and Spanish neonatal intensive care units. This is a secondary analysis of data from two cohorts of preterm babies with RDS, stratified by GA (25°− 276; 28°−306; 31°−336) and stabilized on CPAP. FiO2 was collected soon after stabilization and its accuracy to predict subsequent surfactant administration by a rigorously masked physician was assessed.ResultsWe enrolled 412 preterm infants. FiO2 was collected within 2 h of life of life. A cut off of FiO2 > 0.30 failed to identify 50.3% of infants who were later given surfactant by a masked physician. A FiO2 = 0.29 threshold improved sensitivity values to 0.85, 0.79, and 0.61 for the three GA ranges while maintaining specificity of ≥85%. A FiO2 = 0.26 threshold gave sensitivity = 0.83 specificity = 0.79 with GA dependent differences (250−276 sensitivity = 0.90 specificity = 0.80; 280−306 sensitivity = 0.84 specificity = 0.78; 310−336 sensitivity = 0.73 specificity = 0.80).ConclusionsFiO2 is a GA dependent predictor of early surfactant administration. Its accuracy increases when used at lower levels than currently recommended by international guidelines (236 words).

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