Cerebral oxygenation during skin-to-skin care in preterm infants not receiving respiratory support

Author:

Lorenz Laila,Marulli Adriana,Dawson Jennifer A,Owen Louise S,Manley Brett J,Donath Susan M,Davis Peter G,Kamlin C Omar F

Abstract

ObjectiveSkin-to-skin care (SSC) has proven benefits in preterm infants, but increased hypoxic and bradycardic events have been reported. This may make clinicians hesitant to recommend SSC as standard care. We hypothesised that regional cerebral oxygenation (rStO2) measured with near infrared spectroscopy is not worse during SSC compared with standard incubator care.DesignProspective, observational, non-inferiority study.SettingSingle tertiary perinatal centre in Australia.PatientsForty preterm infants (median (IQR) 30.6 (29.1–31.7) weeks' gestation) not receiving respiratory support were studied on day 14 (8–38).InterventionsRecordings during 90 min of incubator care, followed by 90 min of SSC. Each infant acted as their own control and caregivers were blinded to the rStO2 measurements.Main outcome measuresThe primary outcome was the mean difference in rStO2 between SSC and incubator care. The prespecified margin of non-inferiority was −1.5%. Secondary outcomes included heart rate (HR), peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2), time in quiet sleep, temperature and hypoxic (SpO2 <80% for >5 s) or bradycardic events (HR <80 bpm for >5 s) and time spent in cerebral hypoxia (rStO2<55%) and hyperoxia (rStO2>85%).ResultsMean (SD) rStO2 was lower during SSC compared with incubator care: 73.6 (6.0)% vs 74.8 (4.6)%, mean difference (95% CI) 1.3 (2.2 to 0.4)%. HR was 5 bpm higher, SpO2 1% lower and time in quiet sleep 24% longer during SSC. Little evidence of a difference was observed in temperature. The number of hypoxic or bradycardic events as well as the proportion of time spent in cerebral hypoxia and hyperoxia was very low in both periods.ConclusionsMean rStO2 was marginally lower during SSC without observed differences in hypoxic or bardycardic events but an increase in time spent in quiet sleep.Trial registration numberThis trial is linked to Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: identifier 12616000240448. It was registered pre-results.

Funder

NHMRC funding

German Research Society

TÃœFF Habilitation Support

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynaecology,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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