Abstract

BackgroundVariation in practice exists for temperature probe positioning during stabilization of very preterm infants (<32 weeks gestation). We explored the influence of temperature probe sites on thermoregulation.MethodsAn open-label, stratified, balanced, parallel, randomized trial was conducted. Inborn infants were randomly assigned temperature probe to the axilla or to the upper back. The primary outcome was normothermia (local range: 36.8–37.3 °C and World Health Organization (WHO) range: 36.5–37.5 °C) at admission to the neonatal intensive care unit.ResultsBetween 1 November 2018 and 4 July 2022, 178 infants were randomly assigned to one of the two sites (n = 89 each), 175 included in the final analysis. Normothermia (local range) was achieved for 39/87 infants (44.8%) assigned to the upper back compared to 28/88 infants (31.8%) assigned to the axilla [risk difference:13%; 95% CI −1.3–27.3]. Normothermia (WHO range) was achieved for 78/87 infants (89.7%) assigned to the upper back compared to 70/88 infants (79.6%) assigned to the axilla [risk difference:10.1%; 95% CI −0.5–20.7]. No infant recorded temperatures >38 °C or developed skin injury.ConclusionsIn very preterm infants, upper back site was equally effective as the axilla in maintaining normothermia, with no increase in adverse events.Clinical trial registrationThe study was registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12620000293965).ImpactSubstantial variation in practice exists for the site of securing a temperature probe during delivery room stabilization of very preterm infants and the influence of temperature probe site on thermoregulation remains unknown.In this study, upper back site was equally effective as the axilla in maintaining normothermia, with no increase in adverse events.Clinicians could adopt upper back site for maintaining normothermia.This study may contribute data to future international participant data prospective meta analysis of randomized controlled trials worldwide on temperature probe positioning in very preterm infants, increasing translation of research findings to optimize thermoregulation and clinical outcomes.

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