Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the association between prolonged oligohydramnios and a composite outcome of death or severe neurodevelopmental impairment (NDI) at 3 years of age. MethodsThis single-center retrospective cohort study enrolled infants born at 22–29 weeks of gestational age without major congenital anomalies. The patients were classified into three groups depending on the existence and duration of oligohydramnios: no/non-prolonged oligohydramnios (no or 0–7 days of oligohydramnios), prolonged oligohydramnios (8–14 days), and very prolonged oligohydramnios (> 14 days). The primary outcome was a composite of death or severe NDI, which was defined as severe cerebral palsy, developmental delay, severe visual impairment, or deafness at age 3. ResultsOut of the 843 patients, 784 (93 %), 30 (3.6 %), and 29 (3.4 %) were classified into the no/non-prolonged, prolonged, and very prolonged oligohydramnios groups, respectively. After excluding patients lost to follow-up, the adverse composite outcome at 3 years of age was observed in 194/662 (29 %), 7/26 (27 %), and 8/23 (35 %) in the corresponding groups. The composite outcome showed no significant trend with the duration of oligohydramnios (P = 0.70). In a logistic regression model controlling the known predictors of gestational age, birth weight, small-for-gestational-age, male sex, multiple pregnancy, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, antenatal corticosteroids, and the number of family–social risk factors, the duration of oligohydramnios was not independently associated with the composite outcome; odds ratio 1.3 (95 % confidence interval, 0.78–2.0). ConclusionProlonged oligohydramnios was not associated with the composite outcome of death or severe NDI at 3 years of age.
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