Abstract

Objectives This was a retrospective observational study conducted in a tertiary neonatal intensive care unit, in order to investigate factors which influenced the severity of bronchopulmonary dysplasia under NICHD new classification. Methods Six years of clinical data with different grades of bronchopulmonary dysplasia patients were collected and analyzed, bivariate ordinal logistic regression model and multivariable ordinal logistic regression model were used with sensitivity analyses. Results We identified seven variables were associated with the severity of BPD via a bivariate ordinal logistic regression model, including the level of referral hospital (OR 0.273;95% CI 0.117, 0.636), method of caffeine administration (OR 00.418;95% CI 0.177, 0.991), more than two occurrences of reintubation (OR 4.925;95% CI 1.878, 12.915), CPAP reapplication (OR 2.255;95% CI 1.059, 4.802), presence of positive sputum cultures (OR 2.574;95% CI 1.200, 5.519), the cumulative duration of invasive ventilation (OR 1.047;95% CI 1.017, 1.078), and postmenstrual age at the discontinuation of oxygen supplementation (OR 1.190;95% CI 1.027, 1.38). These seven variables were further analyzed via all multivariable ordinal logistic regression models, and we found that tertiary hospital birth and early administration of caffeine could reduce the severity of BPD by approximately 70% (OR 0.263;95% CI 0.090, 0.770) and 60% (OR 0.371;95% CI 0.138, 0.995), respectively. In contrast, multiple reintubations were related to higher BPD severity with an OR of 3.358 (95% CI 1.002, 11.252). Conclusion Improving perinatal care in level II hospitals, standardized caffeine administration, and optimized extubation strategy could potentially decrease the severity of BPD.

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