TY - JOUR
T1 - Cerebral Oximetry in Preterm Infants–To Use or Not to Use, That Is the Question
AU - Greisen, Gorm
AU - Hansen, Mathias Lühr
AU - Rasmussen, Marie Isabel Skov
AU - Vestager, Maria
AU - Hyttel-Sørensen, Simon
AU - Hahn, Gitte Holst
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Greisen, Hansen, Rasmussen, Vestager, Hyttel-Sørensen and Hahn.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The Safeguarding the Brains of our smallest Children (SafeBoosC) project was initially established to test the patient-relevant benefits and harms of cerebral oximetry in extremely preterm infants in the setting of a randomized clinical trial. Extremely preterm infants constitute a small group of patients with a high risk of death or survival with brain injury and subsequent neurodevelopmental disability. Several cerebral oximeters are approved for clinical use, but the use of additional equipment may disturb and thereby possibly harm these vulnerable, immature patients. Thus, the mission statement of the consortium is “do not disturb—unless necessary.” There may also be more tangible risks such as skin breakdown, displacement of tubes and catheters due to more complicated nursing care, and mismanagement of cerebral oxygenation as a physiological variable. Other monitoring modalities have relevance for reducing the risk of hypoxic-ischemic brain injury occurring during acute illness and have found their place in routine clinical care without evidence from randomized clinical trials. In this manuscript, we discuss cerebral oximetry, pulse oximetry, non-invasive electric cardiometry, and invasive monitoring of blood pressure. We discuss the reliability of the measurements, the pathophysiological rationale behind the clinical use, the evidence of benefit and harms, and the costs. By examining similarities and differences, we aim to provide our perspective on the use or non-use of cerebral oximetry in newborn infants during intensive care.
AB - The Safeguarding the Brains of our smallest Children (SafeBoosC) project was initially established to test the patient-relevant benefits and harms of cerebral oximetry in extremely preterm infants in the setting of a randomized clinical trial. Extremely preterm infants constitute a small group of patients with a high risk of death or survival with brain injury and subsequent neurodevelopmental disability. Several cerebral oximeters are approved for clinical use, but the use of additional equipment may disturb and thereby possibly harm these vulnerable, immature patients. Thus, the mission statement of the consortium is “do not disturb—unless necessary.” There may also be more tangible risks such as skin breakdown, displacement of tubes and catheters due to more complicated nursing care, and mismanagement of cerebral oxygenation as a physiological variable. Other monitoring modalities have relevance for reducing the risk of hypoxic-ischemic brain injury occurring during acute illness and have found their place in routine clinical care without evidence from randomized clinical trials. In this manuscript, we discuss cerebral oximetry, pulse oximetry, non-invasive electric cardiometry, and invasive monitoring of blood pressure. We discuss the reliability of the measurements, the pathophysiological rationale behind the clinical use, the evidence of benefit and harms, and the costs. By examining similarities and differences, we aim to provide our perspective on the use or non-use of cerebral oximetry in newborn infants during intensive care.
KW - brain
KW - clinical benefit
KW - monitoring
KW - near-infrared spectroscopy
KW - oximetry
KW - randomized trial
U2 - 10.3389/fped.2021.747660
DO - 10.3389/fped.2021.747660
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 35186815
AN - SCOPUS:85124903162
VL - 9
JO - Frontiers in Pediatrics
JF - Frontiers in Pediatrics
SN - 2296-2360
M1 - 747660
ER -