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Echocardiographically Guided Versus Standard Ibuprofen Treatment for Patent Ductus Arteriosus

Phase 3
Completed
Conditions
Patent Ductus Arteriosus
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT01593163
Lead Sponsor
Fundacion para la Investigacion Biomedica del Hospital Universitario la Paz
Brief Summary

Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is a very common condition in immature newborn babies and it has been associated to morbidity and mortality. Ibuprofen is the drug of choice for PDA treatment according to the last version of the Cochrane review. Nowadays the best dose regimen for ibuprofen remains uncertain. The investigators aim to perform a randomized controlled clinical trial to assess whether echocardiographically guided PDA ibuprofen treatment versus standard treatment could reduce the number of doses of ibuprofen without increasing the reopening rate and reducing the side effects associated to this medication.

Detailed Description

Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is presented in 55 to 70% of the preterm infants with a gestational age lower than 30 weeks or a birth weight lower than 1000 grams. PDA has being associated to mortality or morbidity such as ischemic or hemorrhagic cerebral events, necrotising enterocolitis, renal disfunction or poor pulmonary outcome; however, it is not clear whether these are a consequence of the PDA presence, the treatment implemented for closing it, or the immaturity of these population. PDA standard treatment (ST) consists on three doses of indomethacin or ibuprofen (10-5-5mg/kg) given 24 hours apart, being the surgical closure a second line therapeutic option. In spite of ibuprofen has been pointed as the drug of choice for PDA treatment by the last version of the Cochrane review, side effects have been associated to both medication. Standard ibuprofen treatment is based on a clinical trial where the three-dose protocol seemed to be more effective than one-dose scheme for PDA closure; however, the sample size was not powered to find differences statistically significant, so nowadays the best dose regimen for ibuprofen remains uncertain. Functional echocardiographic assessment is spreading to all over the world. In this scenario, it has been proposed its implementation to guide PDA treatment in order to individualize the number of doses of indomethacin administered as a function of patient's response, limiting the doses and side effects in those where PDA presented an early constriction. The investigators hypothesized whether echocardiographically guided PDA ibuprofen treatment could reduce the number of doses of ibuprofen without increasing the reopening rate and reducing the side effects associated to this medication.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
49
Inclusion Criteria
  • Preterm infants with a gestational age lower than 37 weeks of gestational age
  • PDA ≥ 1.5 mm
  • No contraindication to receive ibuprofen
  • Informed consent signed.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Life-threatening congenital defects
  • Congenital heart disease
  • Contraindication for ibuprofen administration such as oligoanuria < 1cc/kg/h or recent severe intraventricular bleeding (IVH grade III) or creatinine serum level > 1.5 mg/dl or potential intestinal ischemia.
  • Informed consent refused

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
EchoGIbuprofen EchoGInfants in the experimental group (echoG treatment) received additional doses of ibuprofen only if PDA was still ≥ 1.5 mm at the time of the corresponding ibuprofen dose.
ST (standard treatment)Standard ibuprofen treatmentInfants received 3 doses of ibuprofen at 24-hour intervals, independently of ductal size, as long as additional doses were not contraindicated.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
PDA re-opening rateInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

PDA re-opening after echocardiographically documented closure, which the attending physician deemed amenable to additional treatment. Infants with ventilator weaning difficulty, protracted metabolic acidosis or persistent hemodynamic instability were included in this category.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
treatment failureInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

PDA ≥ 1.5 mm 24 hours after a complete ibuprofen course

need for surgical ligationInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

need for surgical ligation

need for additional ibuprofen dosesInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

need for additional ibuprofen doses after treatment was completed

urine outputbefore the first ibuprofen dose was administered (between 12-72 hours of life) until 24 hours after the last dose of ibuprofen was administered (between 36-168 h of life)

urine output

serum creatininebefore the first ibuprofen dose was administered (between 12-72 hours of life) until 24 hours after the last dose of ibuprofen was administered (between 36-168 h of life)

serum creatinine

mortalityInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

mortality

bronchopulmonary dysplasiaInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

bronchopulmonary dysplasia (O2 need at 36 postmenstrual weeks)

necrotising enterocolitisInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

necrotising enterocolitis

intraventricular hemorrhageInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

intraventricular hemorrhage

White matter damageInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

White matter damage

Laser therapy for retinopathyInfants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay in the Newborn Unit, an expected average of 4-8 weeks

Laser therapy for retinopathy

peak systolic velocitybefore each ibuprofen dose should be administered (3 days) and 24 hours after the last dose of ibuprofen was administered

peak systolic velocity measured by means of cerebral Doppler ultrasonography in the anterior and middle cerebral arteries

end-diastolic velocitybefore each ibuprofen dose should be administered (3 days) and 24 hours after the last dose of ibuprofen was administered

end-diastolic velocity measured by means of cerebral Doppler ultrasonography in the anterior and middle cerebral arteries

resistance indexbefore each ibuprofen dose should be administered (3 days) and 24 hours after the last dose of ibuprofen was administered

resistance index measured by means of cerebral Doppler ultrasonography in the anterior and middle cerebral arteries

pulsatility indexbefore each ibuprofen dose should be administered (3 days) and 24 hours after the last dose of ibuprofen was administered

pulsatility index measured by means of cerebral Doppler ultrasonography in the anterior and middle cerebral arteries

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Department of Neonatology, La Paz University Hospital

🇪🇸

Madrid, Spain

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