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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06515405

Effect of Early Hydrocortisone on Risk of Gastrointestinal Perforations in Extremely Preterm Infants

Sponsor: Imperial College London

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

A large, randomised control trial, the PREMILOC trial, has established that giving low dose hydrocortisone prophylactically in the first ten days of life reduces the risk of bronchopulmonary dysplasia in babies born before 32 weeks' gestation. However, the PREMILOC trial was underpowered to investigate rarer side effects, such as gastrointestinal perforation. This study aims to establish whether the odds of gastrointestinal perforation increase when extremely preterm infants are given prophylactic hydrocortisone in the first ten days of life. This retrospective cohort study will use routinely collected data from the U.K. National Neonatal Research Database. The investigators will examine the records of all infants born before 28 weeks' gestation and cared for in English and Welsh neonatal units between 2016 and 2023. Infants will be considered exposed if they received hydrocortisone for at least eight consecutive days, beginning on postnatal day 1 or 2. The primary outcome will be gastrointestinal perforation, as recorded in the infant's neonatal unit record. This outcome will be validated with the original care teams for a sample of babies. Data will be analysed using a propensity score matched approach to reduce the impact of confounding.

Official title: Effect of Early Hydrocortisone on Risk of Gastrointestinal Perforations in Extremely Preterm Infants: A Protocol for a Retrospective Cohort Study Using Routinely Collected Data

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

Any - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

16000

Start Date

2024-07-30

Completion Date

2025-08-30

Last Updated

2024-10-03

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DRUG

Hydrocortisone

Cohort members will be considered to be exposed to early hydrocortisone if either: 1. They receive early hydrocortisone started on postnatal day 1 or 2 and given for more than seven consecutive days OR 2. They receive early hydrocortisone started on postnatal day 1 or 2 and are being cared for in a PROHYDRO unit but die on or before postnatal day 8. PROHYDRO units are defined as units who, at the time the baby was born, had implemented a protocol for use of prophylactic hydrocortisone as part of routine care for babies born less than 28 weeks' gestation. A unit may change from being a non-PROHYDRO unit to a PROHYDRO unit if a new early hydrocortisone protocol is introduced during the study period (2016-2023).

Locations (1)

Imperial College

London, United Kingdom