Neurological sequelae of sepsis in very low birth weight infants: Umbrella review and evidence-based outcome tree Eurosurveillance

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Neurological sequelae of sepsis in very low birth weight infants: Umbrella review and evidence-based outcome tree Eurosurveillance. / Haller, Sebastian; Deindl, Philipp; Cassini, Alessandro; Suetens, Carl; Zingg, Walter; Abu Sin, Muna; Velasco, Edward; Weiß, Bettina; Ducomble, Tanja; Sixtensson, Madlen; Eckmanns, Tim; Harder, Thomas.

In: EUROSURVEILLANCE, Vol. 21, No. 8, 2016, p. .

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Haller, S, Deindl, P, Cassini, A, Suetens, C, Zingg, W, Abu Sin, M, Velasco, E, Weiß, B, Ducomble, T, Sixtensson, M, Eckmanns, T & Harder, T 2016, 'Neurological sequelae of sepsis in very low birth weight infants: Umbrella review and evidence-based outcome tree Eurosurveillance', EUROSURVEILLANCE, vol. 21, no. 8, pp. ..

APA

Haller, S., Deindl, P., Cassini, A., Suetens, C., Zingg, W., Abu Sin, M., Velasco, E., Weiß, B., Ducomble, T., Sixtensson, M., Eckmanns, T., & Harder, T. (2016). Neurological sequelae of sepsis in very low birth weight infants: Umbrella review and evidence-based outcome tree Eurosurveillance. EUROSURVEILLANCE, 21(8), ..

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Bibtex

@article{7f9870e18ce6407c83396be6170ad129,
title = "Neurological sequelae of sepsis in very low birth weight infants: Umbrella review and evidence-based outcome tree Eurosurveillance",
abstract = "Sepsis is a frequent cause of death in very-low-birthweight infants and often results in neurological impairment. Its attributable risk of sequelae has not been systematically assessed. To establish an outcome tree for mapping the burden of neonatal sepsis, we performed systematic searches in MEDLINE{\textregistered}, EMBASE{\textregistered} and Cochrane to identify systematic reviews addressing sequelae of neonatal sepsis. We included cohort studies identified in systematic reviews and performed meta-analyses of attributable risks, measured as risk differences between infected and uninfected infants. Evidence quality was assessed using GRADE. Two systematic reviews met inclusion criteria. The first included nine cohort studies with 5620 participants and five different outcomes (neurodevelopmental impairment, cerebral palsy, vision impairment, hearing impairment, death) for analysis. Pooled risk differences varied between 4% (95%CI:2 to 10%) and 13% (95%CI:5 to 20%). From the second review we analyzed four studies with 472 infants. Positive predictive value of neurodevelopmental impairment for later cognitive impairment ranged between 67% (95%CI:22 to 96%) and 83% (95%CI:36 to 100%). Neonatal sepsis increases risk of permanent neurological impairment. Magnitude of this effect varies by outcome, with evidence quality being low to very low. These data were used to construct an outcome tree for neonatal sepsis. Attributable risk estimates for sequelae following neonatal sepsis are suitable not only for burden estimation but may serve as outcome parameters in interventional studies.",
author = "Sebastian Haller and Philipp Deindl and Alessandro Cassini and Carl Suetens and Walter Zingg and {Abu Sin}, Muna and Edward Velasco and Bettina Wei{\ss} and Tanja Ducomble and Madlen Sixtensson and Tim Eckmanns and Thomas Harder",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = ".",
journal = "EUROSURVEILLANCE",
issn = "1025-496X",
publisher = "Centre Europeen pour la Surveillance Epidemiologique du SIDA",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neurological sequelae of sepsis in very low birth weight infants: Umbrella review and evidence-based outcome tree Eurosurveillance

AU - Haller, Sebastian

AU - Deindl, Philipp

AU - Cassini, Alessandro

AU - Suetens, Carl

AU - Zingg, Walter

AU - Abu Sin, Muna

AU - Velasco, Edward

AU - Weiß, Bettina

AU - Ducomble, Tanja

AU - Sixtensson, Madlen

AU - Eckmanns, Tim

AU - Harder, Thomas

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Sepsis is a frequent cause of death in very-low-birthweight infants and often results in neurological impairment. Its attributable risk of sequelae has not been systematically assessed. To establish an outcome tree for mapping the burden of neonatal sepsis, we performed systematic searches in MEDLINE®, EMBASE® and Cochrane to identify systematic reviews addressing sequelae of neonatal sepsis. We included cohort studies identified in systematic reviews and performed meta-analyses of attributable risks, measured as risk differences between infected and uninfected infants. Evidence quality was assessed using GRADE. Two systematic reviews met inclusion criteria. The first included nine cohort studies with 5620 participants and five different outcomes (neurodevelopmental impairment, cerebral palsy, vision impairment, hearing impairment, death) for analysis. Pooled risk differences varied between 4% (95%CI:2 to 10%) and 13% (95%CI:5 to 20%). From the second review we analyzed four studies with 472 infants. Positive predictive value of neurodevelopmental impairment for later cognitive impairment ranged between 67% (95%CI:22 to 96%) and 83% (95%CI:36 to 100%). Neonatal sepsis increases risk of permanent neurological impairment. Magnitude of this effect varies by outcome, with evidence quality being low to very low. These data were used to construct an outcome tree for neonatal sepsis. Attributable risk estimates for sequelae following neonatal sepsis are suitable not only for burden estimation but may serve as outcome parameters in interventional studies.

AB - Sepsis is a frequent cause of death in very-low-birthweight infants and often results in neurological impairment. Its attributable risk of sequelae has not been systematically assessed. To establish an outcome tree for mapping the burden of neonatal sepsis, we performed systematic searches in MEDLINE®, EMBASE® and Cochrane to identify systematic reviews addressing sequelae of neonatal sepsis. We included cohort studies identified in systematic reviews and performed meta-analyses of attributable risks, measured as risk differences between infected and uninfected infants. Evidence quality was assessed using GRADE. Two systematic reviews met inclusion criteria. The first included nine cohort studies with 5620 participants and five different outcomes (neurodevelopmental impairment, cerebral palsy, vision impairment, hearing impairment, death) for analysis. Pooled risk differences varied between 4% (95%CI:2 to 10%) and 13% (95%CI:5 to 20%). From the second review we analyzed four studies with 472 infants. Positive predictive value of neurodevelopmental impairment for later cognitive impairment ranged between 67% (95%CI:22 to 96%) and 83% (95%CI:36 to 100%). Neonatal sepsis increases risk of permanent neurological impairment. Magnitude of this effect varies by outcome, with evidence quality being low to very low. These data were used to construct an outcome tree for neonatal sepsis. Attributable risk estimates for sequelae following neonatal sepsis are suitable not only for burden estimation but may serve as outcome parameters in interventional studies.

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 21

SP - .

JO - EUROSURVEILLANCE

JF - EUROSURVEILLANCE

SN - 1025-496X

IS - 8

ER -