Oxygenation associated with cord management strategies among preterm infants <32 weeks gestation during the transition period.

Journal: Journal Of Perinatology : Official Journal Of The California Perinatal Association
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Compare changes in SpO2 and FiO2 post-birth among preterm infants after delayed cord clamping (DCC), umbilical cord milking (UCM) or early cord clamping (ECC).

Methods: Retrospective study of infants <32 weeks gestation born between 2014 and 2021. ECC was clamping 0-59 s, DCC was clamping ≥60 s after delivery, UCM defined as milking the intact umbilical cord several times before clamping.

Results: Of 463 infants; 257 received DCC, 168 received UCM, 38 received ECC. UCM infants had higher median SpO2 values at 4-(79% UCM vs 69% DCC, p = 0.027) and 5-(85% UCM vs 80% DCC, p = 0.023) minutes after-birth compared to DCC. DCC and UCM infants required lower FiO2 levels in the first 5-minutes compared to ECC infants (DCC 0.38 ± 0.17, UCM 0.40 ± 0.20 vs ECC 0.51 ± 0.27, p's <0.001).

Conclusions: The proportion of infants achieving SpO2 ≥ 80% by 5 min was similar in all groups, FiO2 needed to achieve this goal was higher in ECC infants.

Authors
Catherine Peterson, Lucia Ferrer, Shashank Sanjay, Debra Poeltler, Satyan Lakshminrusimha, Anup Katheria
Relevant Conditions

Premature Infant