2 year neurodevelopmental and intermediate perinatal outcomes in infants with very preterm fetal growth restriction (TRUFFLE): a randomised trial

Standard

2 year neurodevelopmental and intermediate perinatal outcomes in infants with very preterm fetal growth restriction (TRUFFLE): a randomised trial. / Lees, Christoph C; Marlow, Neil; van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, Aleid; Arabin, Birgit; Bilardo, Caterina M; Brezinka, Christoph; Calvert, Sandra; Derks, Jan B; Diemert, Anke; Duvekot, Johannes J; Ferrazzi, Enrico; Frusca, Tiziana; Ganzevoort, Wessel; Hecher, Kurt; Martinelli, Pasquale; Ostermayer, Eva; Papageorghiou, Aris T; Schlembach, Dietmar; Schneider, K T M; Thilaganathan, Baskaran; Todros, Tullia; Valcamonico, Adriana; Visser, Gerard H A; Wolf, Hans; TRUFFLE Group.

in: LANCET, Jahrgang 385, Nr. 9983, 30.05.2015, S. 2162-2172.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Lees, CC, Marlow, N, van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, A, Arabin, B, Bilardo, CM, Brezinka, C, Calvert, S, Derks, JB, Diemert, A, Duvekot, JJ, Ferrazzi, E, Frusca, T, Ganzevoort, W, Hecher, K, Martinelli, P, Ostermayer, E, Papageorghiou, AT, Schlembach, D, Schneider, KTM, Thilaganathan, B, Todros, T, Valcamonico, A, Visser, GHA, Wolf, H & TRUFFLE Group 2015, '2 year neurodevelopmental and intermediate perinatal outcomes in infants with very preterm fetal growth restriction (TRUFFLE): a randomised trial', LANCET, Jg. 385, Nr. 9983, S. 2162-2172. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(14)62049-3

APA

Lees, C. C., Marlow, N., van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, A., Arabin, B., Bilardo, C. M., Brezinka, C., Calvert, S., Derks, J. B., Diemert, A., Duvekot, J. J., Ferrazzi, E., Frusca, T., Ganzevoort, W., Hecher, K., Martinelli, P., Ostermayer, E., Papageorghiou, A. T., Schlembach, D., Schneider, K. T. M., ... TRUFFLE Group (2015). 2 year neurodevelopmental and intermediate perinatal outcomes in infants with very preterm fetal growth restriction (TRUFFLE): a randomised trial. LANCET, 385(9983), 2162-2172. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(14)62049-3

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{42e3f24949074497bc8d96c5a683671d,
title = "2 year neurodevelopmental and intermediate perinatal outcomes in infants with very preterm fetal growth restriction (TRUFFLE): a randomised trial",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: No consensus exists for the best way to monitor and when to trigger delivery in mothers of babies with fetal growth restriction. We aimed to assess whether changes in the fetal ductus venosus Doppler waveform (DV) could be used as indications for delivery instead of cardiotocography short-term variation (STV).METHODS: In this prospective, European multicentre, unblinded, randomised study, we included women with singleton fetuses at 26-32 weeks of gestation who had very preterm fetal growth restriction (ie, low abdominal circumference [<10th percentile] and a high umbilical artery Doppler pulsatility index [>95th percentile]). We randomly allocated women 1:1:1, with randomly sized blocks and stratified by participating centre and gestational age (<29 weeks vs ≥29 weeks), to three timing of delivery plans, which differed according to antenatal monitoring strategies: reduced cardiotocograph fetal heart rate STV (CTG STV), early DV changes (pulsatility index >95th percentile; DV p95), or late DV changes (A wave [the deflection within the venous waveform signifying atrial contraction] at or below baseline; DV no A). The primary outcome was survival without cerebral palsy or neurosensory impairment, or a Bayley III developmental score of less than 85, at 2 years of age. We assessed outcomes in surviving infants with known outcomes at 2 years. We did an intention to treat study for all participants for whom we had data. Safety outcomes were deaths in utero and neonatal deaths and were assessed in all randomly allocated women. This study is registered with ISRCTN, number 56204499.FINDINGS: Between Jan 1, 2005 and Oct 1, 2010, 503 of 542 eligible women were randomly allocated to monitoring groups (166 to CTG STV, 167 to DV p95, and 170 to DV no A). The median gestational age at delivery was 30·7 weeks (IQR 26·1-40·6) and mean birthweight was 1019 g (SD 322). The proportion of infants surviving without neuroimpairment did not differ between the CTG STV (111 [77%] of 144 infants with known outcome), DV p95 (119 [84%] of 142), and DV no A (133 [85%] of 157) groups (ptrend=0·09). 12 fetuses (2%) died in utero and 27 (6%) neonatal deaths occurred. Of survivors, more infants where women were randomly assigned to delivery according to late ductus changes (133 [95%] of 144, 95%, 95% CI 90-98) were free of neuroimpairment when compared with those randomly assigned to CTG (111 [85%] of 131, 95% CI 78-90; p=0.005), but this was accompanied by a non-significant increase in perinatal and infant mortality.INTERPRETATION: Although the difference in the proportion of infants surviving without neuroimpairment was non-significant at the primary endpoint, timing of delivery based on the study protocol using late changes in the DV waveform might produce an improvement in developmental outcomes at 2 years of age.FUNDING: ZonMw, The Netherlands and Dr Hans Ludwig Geisenhofer Foundation, Germany.",
author = "Lees, {Christoph C} and Neil Marlow and {van Wassenaer-Leemhuis}, Aleid and Birgit Arabin and Bilardo, {Caterina M} and Christoph Brezinka and Sandra Calvert and Derks, {Jan B} and Anke Diemert and Duvekot, {Johannes J} and Enrico Ferrazzi and Tiziana Frusca and Wessel Ganzevoort and Kurt Hecher and Pasquale Martinelli and Eva Ostermayer and Papageorghiou, {Aris T} and Dietmar Schlembach and Schneider, {K T M} and Baskaran Thilaganathan and Tullia Todros and Adriana Valcamonico and Visser, {Gerard H A} and Hans Wolf and {TRUFFLE Group}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.",
year = "2015",
month = may,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/S0140-6736(14)62049-3",
language = "English",
volume = "385",
pages = "2162--2172",
journal = "LANCET",
issn = "0140-6736",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "9983",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - 2 year neurodevelopmental and intermediate perinatal outcomes in infants with very preterm fetal growth restriction (TRUFFLE): a randomised trial

AU - Lees, Christoph C

AU - Marlow, Neil

AU - van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, Aleid

AU - Arabin, Birgit

AU - Bilardo, Caterina M

AU - Brezinka, Christoph

AU - Calvert, Sandra

AU - Derks, Jan B

AU - Diemert, Anke

AU - Duvekot, Johannes J

AU - Ferrazzi, Enrico

AU - Frusca, Tiziana

AU - Ganzevoort, Wessel

AU - Hecher, Kurt

AU - Martinelli, Pasquale

AU - Ostermayer, Eva

AU - Papageorghiou, Aris T

AU - Schlembach, Dietmar

AU - Schneider, K T M

AU - Thilaganathan, Baskaran

AU - Todros, Tullia

AU - Valcamonico, Adriana

AU - Visser, Gerard H A

AU - Wolf, Hans

AU - TRUFFLE Group

N1 - Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

PY - 2015/5/30

Y1 - 2015/5/30

N2 - BACKGROUND: No consensus exists for the best way to monitor and when to trigger delivery in mothers of babies with fetal growth restriction. We aimed to assess whether changes in the fetal ductus venosus Doppler waveform (DV) could be used as indications for delivery instead of cardiotocography short-term variation (STV).METHODS: In this prospective, European multicentre, unblinded, randomised study, we included women with singleton fetuses at 26-32 weeks of gestation who had very preterm fetal growth restriction (ie, low abdominal circumference [<10th percentile] and a high umbilical artery Doppler pulsatility index [>95th percentile]). We randomly allocated women 1:1:1, with randomly sized blocks and stratified by participating centre and gestational age (<29 weeks vs ≥29 weeks), to three timing of delivery plans, which differed according to antenatal monitoring strategies: reduced cardiotocograph fetal heart rate STV (CTG STV), early DV changes (pulsatility index >95th percentile; DV p95), or late DV changes (A wave [the deflection within the venous waveform signifying atrial contraction] at or below baseline; DV no A). The primary outcome was survival without cerebral palsy or neurosensory impairment, or a Bayley III developmental score of less than 85, at 2 years of age. We assessed outcomes in surviving infants with known outcomes at 2 years. We did an intention to treat study for all participants for whom we had data. Safety outcomes were deaths in utero and neonatal deaths and were assessed in all randomly allocated women. This study is registered with ISRCTN, number 56204499.FINDINGS: Between Jan 1, 2005 and Oct 1, 2010, 503 of 542 eligible women were randomly allocated to monitoring groups (166 to CTG STV, 167 to DV p95, and 170 to DV no A). The median gestational age at delivery was 30·7 weeks (IQR 26·1-40·6) and mean birthweight was 1019 g (SD 322). The proportion of infants surviving without neuroimpairment did not differ between the CTG STV (111 [77%] of 144 infants with known outcome), DV p95 (119 [84%] of 142), and DV no A (133 [85%] of 157) groups (ptrend=0·09). 12 fetuses (2%) died in utero and 27 (6%) neonatal deaths occurred. Of survivors, more infants where women were randomly assigned to delivery according to late ductus changes (133 [95%] of 144, 95%, 95% CI 90-98) were free of neuroimpairment when compared with those randomly assigned to CTG (111 [85%] of 131, 95% CI 78-90; p=0.005), but this was accompanied by a non-significant increase in perinatal and infant mortality.INTERPRETATION: Although the difference in the proportion of infants surviving without neuroimpairment was non-significant at the primary endpoint, timing of delivery based on the study protocol using late changes in the DV waveform might produce an improvement in developmental outcomes at 2 years of age.FUNDING: ZonMw, The Netherlands and Dr Hans Ludwig Geisenhofer Foundation, Germany.

AB - BACKGROUND: No consensus exists for the best way to monitor and when to trigger delivery in mothers of babies with fetal growth restriction. We aimed to assess whether changes in the fetal ductus venosus Doppler waveform (DV) could be used as indications for delivery instead of cardiotocography short-term variation (STV).METHODS: In this prospective, European multicentre, unblinded, randomised study, we included women with singleton fetuses at 26-32 weeks of gestation who had very preterm fetal growth restriction (ie, low abdominal circumference [<10th percentile] and a high umbilical artery Doppler pulsatility index [>95th percentile]). We randomly allocated women 1:1:1, with randomly sized blocks and stratified by participating centre and gestational age (<29 weeks vs ≥29 weeks), to three timing of delivery plans, which differed according to antenatal monitoring strategies: reduced cardiotocograph fetal heart rate STV (CTG STV), early DV changes (pulsatility index >95th percentile; DV p95), or late DV changes (A wave [the deflection within the venous waveform signifying atrial contraction] at or below baseline; DV no A). The primary outcome was survival without cerebral palsy or neurosensory impairment, or a Bayley III developmental score of less than 85, at 2 years of age. We assessed outcomes in surviving infants with known outcomes at 2 years. We did an intention to treat study for all participants for whom we had data. Safety outcomes were deaths in utero and neonatal deaths and were assessed in all randomly allocated women. This study is registered with ISRCTN, number 56204499.FINDINGS: Between Jan 1, 2005 and Oct 1, 2010, 503 of 542 eligible women were randomly allocated to monitoring groups (166 to CTG STV, 167 to DV p95, and 170 to DV no A). The median gestational age at delivery was 30·7 weeks (IQR 26·1-40·6) and mean birthweight was 1019 g (SD 322). The proportion of infants surviving without neuroimpairment did not differ between the CTG STV (111 [77%] of 144 infants with known outcome), DV p95 (119 [84%] of 142), and DV no A (133 [85%] of 157) groups (ptrend=0·09). 12 fetuses (2%) died in utero and 27 (6%) neonatal deaths occurred. Of survivors, more infants where women were randomly assigned to delivery according to late ductus changes (133 [95%] of 144, 95%, 95% CI 90-98) were free of neuroimpairment when compared with those randomly assigned to CTG (111 [85%] of 131, 95% CI 78-90; p=0.005), but this was accompanied by a non-significant increase in perinatal and infant mortality.INTERPRETATION: Although the difference in the proportion of infants surviving without neuroimpairment was non-significant at the primary endpoint, timing of delivery based on the study protocol using late changes in the DV waveform might produce an improvement in developmental outcomes at 2 years of age.FUNDING: ZonMw, The Netherlands and Dr Hans Ludwig Geisenhofer Foundation, Germany.

U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)62049-3

DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)62049-3

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 25747582

VL - 385

SP - 2162

EP - 2172

JO - LANCET

JF - LANCET

SN - 0140-6736

IS - 9983

ER -