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. 2015 Mar;169(3):230-8.
doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2014.3351.

Survival and morbidity of preterm children born at 22 through 34 weeks' gestation in France in 2011: results of the EPIPAGE-2 cohort study

Pierre-Yves Ancel  1 François Goffinet  2 EPIPAGE-2 Writing GroupPierre Kuhn  3 Bruno Langer  3 Jacqueline Matis  3 Xavier Hernandorena  4 Pierre Chabanier  5 Laurence Joly-Pedespan  5 Bénédicte Lecomte  6 Françoise Vendittelli  6 Michel Dreyfus  7 Bernard Guillois  8 Antoine Burguet  9 Pierre Sagot  10 Jacques Sizun  11 Alain Beuchée  12 Florence Rouget  12 Amélie Favreau  13 Elie Saliba  14 Nathalie Bednarek  15 Patrice Morville  15 Gérard Thiriez  16 Loïc Marpeau  17 Stéphane Marret  18 Gilles Kayem  19 Xavier Durrmeyer  20 Michèle Granier  21 Olivier Baud  22 Pierre-Henri Jarreau  23 Delphine Mitanchez  24 Pascal Boileau  25 Pierre Boulot  26 Gilles Cambonie  27 Hubert Daudé  28 Antoine Bédu  29 Fabienne Mons  29 Jeanne Fresson  30 Rachel Vieux  31 Corine AlbergeCatherine Arnaud  32 Christophe Vayssière  33 Patrick Truffert  34 Véronique Pierrat  34 Damien Subtil  35 Claude D'Ercole  36 Catherine Gire  37 Umberto Simeoni  38 André Bongain  39 Loïc Sentilhes  40 Jean-Christophe Rozé  41 Jean Gondry  42 André Leke  43 Michel Deiber  44 Olivier Claris  45 Jean-Charles Picaud  46 Anne Ego  47 Thierry Debillon  48 Anne Poulichet  49 Eliane Coliné  49 Anne Favre  50 Olivier Fléchelles  51 Sylvain Samperiz  52 Duksha Ramful  52 Bernard Branger  53 Valérie Benhammou  54 Laurence Foix-L'Hélias  54 Laetitia Marchand-Martin  54 Monique Kaminski  54
Affiliations

Survival and morbidity of preterm children born at 22 through 34 weeks' gestation in France in 2011: results of the EPIPAGE-2 cohort study

Pierre-Yves Ancel et al. JAMA Pediatr. 2015 Mar.

Erratum in

  • Error in group information and figure.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] JAMA Pediatr. 2015 Apr;169(4):323. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2015.0528. JAMA Pediatr. 2015. PMID: 25844987 No abstract available.

Abstract

Importance: Up-to-date estimates of the health outcomes of preterm children are needed for assessing perinatal care, informing parents, making decisions about care, and providing evidence for clinical guidelines.

Objectives: To determine survival and neonatal morbidity of infants born from 22 through 34 completed weeks' gestation in France in 2011 and compare these outcomes with a comparable cohort in 1997.

Design, setting, and participants: The EPIPAGE-2 study is a national, prospective, population-based cohort study conducted in all maternity and neonatal units in France in 2011. A total of 2205 births (stillbirths and live births) and terminations of pregnancy at 22 through 26 weeks' gestation, 3257 at 27 through 31 weeks, and 1234 at 32 through 34 weeks were studied. Cohort data were collected from January 1 through December 31, 1997, and from March 28 through December 31, 2011. Analyses for 1997 were run for the entire year and then separately for April to December; the rates for survival and morbidities did not differ. Data are therefore presented for the whole year in 1997 and the 8-month and 6-month periods in 2011.

Main outcomes and measures: Survival to discharge and survival without any of the following adverse outcomes: grade III or IV intraventricular hemorrhage, cystic periventricular leukomalacia, severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia, retinopathy of prematurity (stage 3 or higher), or necrotizing enterocolitis (stages 2-3).

Results: A total of 0.7% of infants born before 24 weeks' gestation survived to discharge: 31.2% of those born at 24 weeks, 59.1% at 25 weeks, and 75.3% at 26 weeks. Survival rates were 93.6% at 27 through 31 weeks and 98.9% at 32 through 34 weeks. Infants discharged home without severe neonatal morbidity represented 0% at 23 weeks, 11.6% at 24 weeks, 30.0% at 25 weeks, 47.5% at 26 weeks, 81.3% at 27 through 31 weeks, and 96.8% at 32 through 34 weeks. Compared with 1997, the proportion of infants surviving without severe morbidity in 2011 increased by 14.4% (P < .001) at 25 through 29 weeks and 6% (P < .001) at 30 through 31 weeks but did not change appreciably for those born at less than 25 weeks. The rates of antenatal corticosteroid use, induced preterm deliveries, cesarean deliveries, and surfactant use increased significantly in all gestational-age groups, except at 22 through 23 weeks.

Conclusions and relevance: The substantial improvement in survival in France for newborns born at 25 through 31 weeks' gestation was accompanied by an important reduction in severe morbidity, but survival remained rare before 25 weeks. Although improvement in survival at extremely low gestational age may be possible, its effect on long-term outcomes requires further studies. The long-term results of the EPIPAGE-2 study will be informative in this regard.

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