This study is a randomized, placebo-controlled, clinical trial to evaluate whether induced whole-body hypothermia initiated between 6-24 hours of age and continued for 96 hours in infants ≥ 36 weeks gestational age with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy will reduce the incidence of death or disability at 18-22 months of age. The study will enroll 168 infants with signs of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy at 16 NICHD Neonatal Research Network sites, and randomly assign them to either receive hypothermia or participate in a non-cooled control group.
Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) is a rare, but life-threatening condition characterized by acute or subacute brain injury due to asphyxia. In most cases the underlying cause and timing of injury are unknown, but many cases are diagnosed at or shortly after birth. According to the World Health Organization, more than 722,000 children died from birth asphyxia and birth trauma worldwide in 2004. An estimated 50-75 percent of infants with severe (stage 3) HIE will die, with 55 percent of these deaths occurring in the first month. The incidence of long-term complications depends on the severity of HIE. Up to 80 percent of infants who survive stage 3 HIE develop significant long-term neurological disabilities - mental retardation, epilepsy, and cerebral palsy with hemiplegia, paraplegia, or quadriplegia; 10-20 percent develop moderately serious disabilities; and up to 10 percent are normal. Because animal data suggests that brain injury from HIE evolves over several hours to days after the initial asphyxic insult, induced hypothermia holds promise as a neuroprotective therapy. Additional trials are needed to help define the most effective cooling strategies. With this in mind, and knowing that many babies with HIE arrive at neonatal intensive care units several hours after birth, this study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of initiating hypothermia 6-24 hours after birth. Study subjects: Infants born at 36 0/7ths weeks or greater gestational age that have been diagnosed with neonatal depression, perinatal asphyxia, or encephalopathy. The goal is to enroll 168 subjects. Stratification: After informed consent is obtained, infants will be randomized to either a hypothermia arm (with a target esophageal temperature of 33.5°C) or a control arm (37.0°C) for 96 hours. Enrolled infants will be stratified by age of enrollment (≤ 12 and \> 12 hours) and stage of encephalopathy (moderate or severe). Informed Consent: Parents of eligible infants will be approached for consent to enroll in the study if the infant has a high probability of acute hemodynamic compromise, as defined above. Subsequent screening will determine whether the infant meets all inclusion criteria. Randomization: eligible and consented infants will be randomly assigned to either a hypothermia intervention group, or a non-cooled (control) group. Study Intervention: Induced whole-body hypothermia (with a target esophageal temperature of 33.5°C) or a control group (37.0°C) for 96 hours. Interim Study Interruptions: None to date. Secondary Study includes determining an association between MRI detectable injury and neurodevelopment at 18-22 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
168
Induced Whole-body hypothermia (with a target esophageal temperature of 33.5°C) for 96 hours
Normothermic Control group (with esophageal temperature at or near 37.0°C) for 96 hours
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
University of California - Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
Stanford University
Palo Alto, California, United States
Yale University
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
Emory University
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Indiana University
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa, United States
Tufts Medical Center
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wayne State University
Detroit, Michigan, United States
Children's Mercy Hospital
Kansas City, Missouri, United States
...and 12 more locations
Death or Moderate or Severe Disability
Severe disability was defined by any of the following: a Bayley III cognitive score \< 70 or Gross Motor Functional (GMF) Level of 3-5 blindness or profound hearing loss requiring amplification but still unable to follow commands/communicate. Moderate disability was defined as a Bayley III cognitive score between 70-84 and either a GMF level of 2 or a seizure disorder or a hearing deficit.
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Deaths in the NICU and Following Discharge
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With Moderate and Severe Disability
Moderate disability will be defined as a Bayley III cognitive score between 70-84 and either a GMF level of 2 or a seizure disorder or a hearing deficit. Severe disability will be defined by any of the following: a Bayley III cognitive score \< 70 or Gross Motor Functional (GMF) Level of 3-5 or blindness or profound hearing loss requiring amplification but still unable to follow commands/communicate.
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With Mild, Moderate and Severe Disability
Mild disability will be defined by either a Bayley III cognitive score of 70-84 alone or a Bayley III cognitive score \>= 85 and any of the following: presence of a GMF level 1 or 2 OR seizure disorder or hearing loss. Moderate disability was defined as a Bayley III cognitive score between 70-84 and either a GMF level of 2 or a seizure disorder or a hearing deficit. Severe disability will be defined by any of the following: a Bayley III cognitive score \< 70 OR Gross Motor Functional (GMF) Level of 3-5 OR blindness or profound hearing loss requiring amplification but still unable to follow commands/communicate.
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With Any Disability Based on Level of Encephalopathy at Randomization
Mild disability will be defined by either a Bayley III cognitive score of 70-84 alone or a Bayley III cognitive score \>= 85 and any of the following: presence of a GMF level 1 or 2OR seizure disorder or hearing loss. Moderate disability was defined as a Bayley III cognitive score between 70-84 and either a GMF level of 2 or a seizure disorder or a hearing deficit. Severe disability will be defined by any of the following: a Bayley III cognitive score \< 70 OR Gross Motor Functional (GMF) Level of 3-5 OR blindness or profound hearing loss requiring amplification but still unable to follow commands/communicate.
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With Non-CNS Organ System Dysfunction
Based on observing presence of organ dysfunction on at least one of the following: Pulmonary (Meconium aspiration syndrome, PPHN, Pulmonary hemorrhage, Pneumonia, Chronic lung disease, ECMO, INO), Cardiovascular (Cardiomegaly, Cardiac failure, Cardiac dysfunction (by echo), Cardiac ischemia (by EKG and/or increased enzymes), Hypotension, Arrhythmia), Renal (Oliguria, Anuria, Dialysis), Gastrointestinal (NEC, Hepatic dysfunction), Hematologic (DIC) and Metabolic (Hypoglycemia, Hypocalcemia, Hypomagnesemia)
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With a DNR Order
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With a DNR Order and Support is Withdrawn
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With a DNR Order That Died
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
Number of Infants With Neonatal Seizures, With and Without EEG Abnormalities
Time frame: Birth to 18-22 months corrected gestational age
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