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Growth in extremely preterm children born in England in 1995 and 2006: The EPICure studies

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Version 2 2022-06-29, 09:54
Version 1 2021-07-07, 15:21
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posted on 2022-06-29, 09:54 authored by Yanyan Ni, Rebecca Lancaster, Emmi Suonpera, Marilivia Bernardi, Amanda Fahy, Jennifer Larsen, Jayne Trickett, John Hurst, Dieter Wolke, Samantha Johnson, Neil Marlow
<p>Objectives To determine growth outcomes at 11 years of age in children born <27 weeks of gestation in England in 2006 (EPICure2) and to compare growth from birth to 11 years of age for births<26 weeks with those in England in 1995 (EPICure).</p> <p><br></p> <p>Methods 200 EPICure2 children assessed at 11 years alongside 143 term-born controls. Growth measures from birth to 11 years were compared for births<26 weeks between EPICure2 (n=112) and EPICure (n=176). Growth parameter z-scores were derived from 1990 UK standards.</p> <p><br></p> <p>Results Among EPICure2 children, mean z-scores for height and weight were close to the population standards (0.08 and 0.18 SD, respectively) but significantly below those of controls: difference in mean (Δ) z-scores for weight −0.42 SD (95% CI −0.68 to –0.17), for height −0.45 SD (−0.70 to –0.20) and for head circumference (HC) −1.05 SD (−1.35 to –0.75); mean body mass index (BMI) z-score in EPICure2 children was 0.18 SD, not significantly different from controls (0.43 SD, p=0.065). Compared with EPICure, EPICure2 children born <26 weeks at 11 years had higher z-scores for weight (Δ 0.72 (0.47, 0.96)), height (Δ 0.55 (0.29, 0.81)) and BMI (Δ 0.56 (0.24, 0.87)), which were not fully explained by perinatal/demographic differences between eras. Weight catch-up was greater from term-age to 2.5/3 years in EPICure2 than in EPICure (1.25 SD vs 0.53 SD; p<0.001). Poor HC growth was observed in EPICure2, unchanged from EPICure.</p> <p><br></p> <p>Conclusions Since 1995, childhood growth in weight, height and BMI have improved for births <26 weeks of gestation, but there was no improvement in head growth.</p>

History

Citation

Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition 2022;107:193-200.

Author affiliation

Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition

Volume

107

Pagination

193-200

Publisher

BMJ

issn

1359-2998

Acceptance date

2021-06-28

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-06-29

Language

en

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