Trajectories of behavior, attention, social and emotional problems from childhood to early adulthood following extremely preterm birth: a prospective cohort study
posted on 2020-04-23, 15:52authored byL Linsell, SJ Johnson, D Wolke, J Morris, J Kurinczuk, N Marlow
<p>To
investigate trajectories of behavior, attention, social and emotional problems
to early adulthood in extremely preterm survivors compared to a term-born
comparison group. Longitudinal analysis of a prospective, population-based
cohort of 315 surviving infants born < 26 completed weeks of gestation
recruited at birth in 1995, from the UK/Republic of Ireland, and a term-born
comparison group recruited at age 6. The parent-report Strengths and Difficulties
Questionnaire was completed at age 6, 11, 16 and 19 years. The Total Behavioral
Difficulties Score was 4.81 points higher in extremely preterm individuals
compared to their term-born peers over the period (95% CI 3.76–5.87,
p < 0.001) and trajectories were stable in both groups. The impact of
difficulties on home life, friendships, school or work and/or leisure
activities was greater in the EPT group (RR 4.28, 95% CI 2.89–6.35,
p < 0.001), and hyperactivity/inattention and peer problems accounted for
the largest differences. A clinically significant behavioral screen at age 2.5
was associated with a higher Total Behavioral Difficulties Score from 6 years
onwards in extremely preterm participants (Mean difference 6.90, 95% CI
5.01–8.70, p < 0.0.01), as was moderate/severe cognitive impairment at last
assessment (Mean difference: 4.27, 95% CI 2.76–5.77, p < 0.001). Attention,
social and emotional problems in extremely preterm individuals persist into
early adulthood with significant impact on daily life. A positive behavioral
screen in infancy and moderate/severe cognitive impairment are associated with
early adult outcomes.</p>
Funding
NIHR Doctoral Research Fellowship, NIHR-DRF-2012-05-206. The EPICure Study was funded by a Medical Research Council Programme Grant to NM (Ref no: MR/J01107X/1).