Assessing Intellectual and Motor Outcomes in High-risk Infants
- Conditions
- Cerebral PalsyCerebral Palsy (CP)Cerebral Palsy ChildrenHigh-risk InfantsIntellectual and Developmental DisabilitiesMotor ImpairmentCognitive Development
- Registration Number
- NCT06857539
- Lead Sponsor
- University College Cork
- Brief Summary
Cerebral palsy (CP) is a condition when a baby has a brain injury that affects their movement and muscle tone. Some people with CP can have other developmental issues, like learning impairments, but many do not and have isolated issues with their motor skills. Some newborns are at higher risk of developing CP, including babies born prematurely, those who have an injury to their brain, and those who have an abnormal neurological examination. However, most babies with a higher risk of CP do not develop CP. The problem is that doctors can't tell early on who will and who will not develop CP, they can only say who has a risk of it. Therefore, these babies are followed up in out-patient clinics to see how they are progressing, usually by a neonatologist (baby doctor), often a physiotherapist, and some may also be referred to services in the community like the Early Intervention Team. If there is a significant concern, doctors will often perform a scan of the baby's brain to provide more information. Even with all this follow-up, it still usually takes at least 12 months, and can be up to 2 years, to diagnose a child as having CP.
In this study the aim is to try and reduce the age of diagnosis of CP by assessing children in high-risk out-patient clinics using novel and specific examinations. This study is being conducted at several hospitals in Ireland, including Cork University Maternity Hospital (CUMH), The Rotunda Hospital and the Coombe Women and Infants Hospital. It is being coordinated by the In4kids network and will be conducted in the INFANT Centre/ University College Cork (UCC). The study has been funded by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) and the Cerebral Palsy Foundation, USA.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 600
- (High Risk Group)
Legal guardians must be able and willing to give written informed consent and to comply with the requirements of this study protocol.
All infants considered high risk for a diagnosis of cerebral palsy and neuro-developmental impairment will be eligible, specifically including:
All preterm infants born ≤32 weeks Post Menstrual Age or ≤1500 gm birth weight
All encephalopathic infants
Neurological risk factors (e.g., cerebral birth defect, injury/malformation on neuroimaging, persistently abnormal neurological exam)
(Control Group)
All full term infants will be eligible if:
Term infants born > 37 weeks gestational age
Not admitted to the NICU
No neurological impairments at birth (no identified congenital or genetic abnormalities)
- (High Risk & Control Groups)
Death prior to discharge from the neonatal unit (High-Risk Infants only)
No parental consent (High-Risk and Control Infants)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method A From near term to 4 months corrected gestational age To characterise the development of neural architecture and function during sleep using EEG, from the near-term period to 4 months corrected gestational age for infants at elevated risk of cerebral palsy and diagnosed with cerebral palsy
B Birth to 6 weeks To examine underlying neuro-specific protein profiles near term corrected gestational age as early biomarkers of altered neural function, motor and developmental outcomes in infants at elevated risk of cerebral palsy and diagnosed with cerebral palsy.
C 4 to 24 months Develop novel measures of cognitive outcome, including executive function, and use these to compare trajectories in infants with cerebral palsy and those without, from 4 to 24 months
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method A During the study period, ie. over five years To optimise existing predictive machine learning algorithms
B 4 months To develop and establish a standardised, early fixation classification assessment tool that can be used for infants at risk of cerebral palsy in high-risk follow-up clinics across Ireland
C 18 months To investigate ophthalmological biomarkers, including morphology, as potential early predictors of cerebral palsy and cognitive outcomes
Related Research Topics
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Trial Locations
- Locations (4)
Cork University Maternity Hospital
🇮🇪Cork, Ireland
INFANT Centre, University College Cork
🇮🇪Cork, Ireland
Coombe Women and Infant's Hospital
🇮🇪Dublin, Ireland
The Rotunda Hospital
🇮🇪Dublin, Ireland