Abstract

Limited knowledge exists about how frequently newborns with Down syndrome receive a prenatal diagnosis, require intensive care, and what surgical and medical factors are contributory. A retrospective cohort study was performed for patients with a diagnosis of Down syndrome born in 2013 and 2014 who sought care at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center during the first year of life. Data were extracted from the electronic medical record through the first year of life including need for intensive care as a newborn, prenatal diagnosis, and medical and surgical complications. Of the 129 patients in the study, 65% required intensive care as newborns. The presence of a structural abnormality that required surgical correction in the neonatal period and certain types of congenital heart disease not requiring surgical intervention in the neonatal period were positively associated with the need for intensive care. A minority of infants, 8%, had a confirmed prenatal diagnosis. A majority of newborns with Down syndrome required intensive care following birth while a minority had any concern for the diagnosis prenatally. Improving prenatal diagnostic rates would allow for better prenatal counseling and delivery planning, while targeting therapeutic interventions for this population is needed to improve outcomes.

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