Reuters Health Information: Tool tells when to stop phototherapy for neonatal hyperbilirubinemia
Tool tells when to stop phototherapy for neonatal hyperbilirubinemia
Last Updated: 2017-02-14
By Marilynn Larkin
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) � A newly developed prediction
tool quantifies a baby�s risk of rebound hyperbilirubinemia, a
study shows.
�Phototherapy is a widely used treatment of neonatal
hyperbilirubinemia. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
provides guidelines for when to start phototherapy, but little
guidance is available for when to discontinue phototherapy,�
write Dr. Pearl Chang of Seattle Children�s Hospital in
Washington and colleagues.
Dr. Chang explains, �Phototherapy treatment for jaundice is
one of the most common reasons why otherwise healthy newborns
need to stay longer in the hospital after they're born or need
to return to the hospital after birth.�
�Clinicians now have a tool to help them decide when
phototherapy can be stopped,� she told Reuters Health by email.
�Given a baby's gestational age and age when treatment was
started, clinicians can use this prediction tool to calculate
the risk of later requiring repeat phototherapy if they were to
discontinue treatment at the baby's current bilirubin level.
They can decide, in conjunction with the parents, whether that
is an acceptable risk or if phototherapy should be continued
longer.�
As reported in Pediatrics, online February 14, Dr. Chang and
colleagues analyzed records of 7,048 infants born from 2012 to
2014 after at least 35 weeks gestation who received inpatient
phototherapy before they were two weeks old. Of those, 3.6% had
rebound hyperbilirubinemia, defined as the return of total serum
bilirubin to levels prior to phototherapy within 72 hours of
treatment termination. The average age at the time of rebound
hyperbilirubinemia was about 3.3 days.
After adjustment, lower gestational age was associated with
higher odds of rebound hyperbilirubinemia, especially in those
born at 35 to 37 weeks� gestation, for whom the odds ratio was
>10 compared with those born at 40 weeks� gestation.
The odds of rebound hyperbilirubinemia also were higher for
Asian infants and those whose total serum bilirubin was
relatively higher at the end of phototherapy.
The odds were lower in African American infants and those
who were older when phototherapy was started. Compared to
infants with birth weights of 3,000 to 3,499 grams, infants
weighing less than 2,500 grams had lower odds of rebound
hyperbilirubinemia.
In addition, infants who received at least four formula
feedings had lower odds of rebound hyperbilirubinemia, as did
those who continued on home phototherapy after inpatient
treatment (OR, 0.62).
After analyzing those and other potential predictors, the
team selected three variables for use in a prediction score:
gestational age <38 weeks (adjusted odds ratio, 4.7), younger
age at initiation of phototherapy (aOR 0.51 per day) and total
serum bilirubin relative to the treatment threshold at the end
of phototherapy (aOR 1.5 per mg/dL).
Approximately 70% of infants had scores less than 20, which
corresponds to a less than 4% probability of rebound
hyperbilirubinemia.
Editorialist Dr. Jeffrey Maisels of Beaumont Children�s
Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan, told Reuters Health, �When
phototherapy is discontinued, a small percentage of infants
(some 5% to 15%) will experience a rebound in the bilirubin
level up to the level at which phototherapy was first initiated,
and these infants require retreatment.�
�Infants who are more likely to experience rebound include
those: (a) who are not born close to full term (38-40 weeks),
(b) have an increase in bilirubin levels due to an
incompatibility between the baby�s and mother�s blood groups
(hemolytic jaundice), and (c) who require phototherapy sooner
rather than later after birth,� he said by email.
�Although pediatricians and family physicians have been
aware of these risk factors for some time, they have never been
quantified in a straightforward and easily-applied formula,� he
observed. �When considering the discontinuation of phototherapy,
caregivers now have a simple means of calculating the risk of a
rebound in the bilirubin level that might require retreatment.�
�If the score is low,� Dr. Maisels concluded, �phototherapy
can be stopped and the infant discharged, a thoroughly welcome
outcome for families, hospitals, and physicians.�
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2lMNH9N and http://bit.ly/2lgvx2S
Pediatrics 2017.
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