Extremely premature infants are at risk of developing a potentially blinding eye disease, called retinopathy of prematurity (ROP). Currently available treatment, consisting of laser surgery or injection of drugs into the eye balls, may prevent most but not all cases of permanent ROP-mediated blindness. Both types of treatment are associated with significant costs and side effects. An orally administered drug commonly used to treat hypertension, propranolol, may be effective in halting progression of ROP to severe stages, as suggested by preliminary data from small studies. As severe (threshold) ROP is an overall rare disease, the effectiveness of propranolol in combating ROP can only be assessed in a large, multicenter randomized controlled trial involving hospitals caring for extremely preterm infants of diverse origin.
Threshold Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP), observed in a fraction of extremely premature infants, is characterized by retinal vessel proliferation that threatens vision secondary to retinal detachment. Currently available treatments (ablative laser surgery or intravitreal anti-VEGF injections) may prevent most but not all cases of permanent ROP-mediated blindness and are associated with significant costs and side effects. Orally administered propranolol, a commonly used drug to treat hypertension, may be effective in halting progression of ROP to severe stages, as suggested by preliminary data from small studies. Propranolol has been used for decades not only in adult patients but also in newborn infants with heart diseases. Moreover, it has been licensed in 2014 for the use in newborn infants with hemangioma in the European Union, Switzerland and the United States. This multicenter randomized placebo-controlled trial aims to assess whether oral propranolol given to extremely premature infants below 28 weeks gestational age reduces the rates of threshold ROP.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
276
Oral propranolol (1.6 mg propranolol-hydrochloride/kg/d in 4 divided dosages)
Oral solution containing the same excipients as propranolol solution
University Hospital Tübingen
Tübingen, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
RECRUITINGUniversity Hospital Zurich
Zurich, Canton of Zurich, Switzerland
RECRUITINGAnkara University School of Medicine Children's Hospital
Ankara, Ankara, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGSurvival without adverse ophthalmological outcome (stage ≥ 3, AP-ROP, or any ROP treatment)
The primary endpoint for efficacy is survival until 48 weeks postmenstrual age without adverse ophthalmological outcome (stage ≥ 3, AP-ROP, or any ROP treatment) diagnosed according to the International Committee for the Classification of Retinopathy of Prematurity Revisited.
Time frame: 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Time to adverse ophthalmological outcome in days
Time to adverse ophthalmological outcome in days (alternative to primary endpoint to account for the timing, considering death as a competing risk)
Time frame: 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Survival without adverse ophthalmological outcome
Survival without adverse ophthalmological outcome (as defined for the primary outcome)
Time frame: 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Survival with adverse ophthalmological outcome
Survival with adverse ophthalmological outcome (as defined for the primary outcome)
Time frame: 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Survival without local treatment for ROP
Survival without local treatment for ROP (ablative laser surgery or intravitreal injections of anti-VEGF agents).
Time frame: 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Death until discharge
Death until discharge
Time frame: 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Death until 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Death until 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Time frame: 48 weeks postmenstrual age
Recurrence of ROP in infants treated with anti-VEGF-antagonists
Recurrence of ROP in infants treated with anti-VEGF-antagonists
Time frame: 70 (+/- 2 weeks) postmenstrual age
Need for repeated ROP therapy in infants treated with anti-VEGF-antagonists
Need for repeated ROP therapy in infants treated with anti-VEGF-antagonists
Time frame: 70 (+/- 2 weeks) postmenstrual age
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