Postnatal Growth and Retinopathy of Prematurity Study: Rationale, Design, and Subject Characteristics.
Publication/Presentation Date
2-1-2017
Abstract
PURPOSE: Postnatal-growth-based predictive models demonstrate strong potential for improving the low specificity of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) screening. Prior studies are limited by inadequate sample size. We sought to study a sufficiently large cohort of at-risk infants to enable development of a model with highly precise estimates of sensitivity for severe ROP.
METHODS: The Postnatal Growth and ROP (G-ROP) Study was a multicenter retrospective cohort study of infants at 30 North American hospitals during 2006-2012. A total of 65 G-ROP-certified abstractors submitted data to a secure, web-based database. Data included ROP examination findings, treatments, complications, daily weight measurements, daily oxygen supplementation, maternal/infant demographics, medical comorbidities, surgical events, and weekly nutrition. Data quality was monitored with system validation rules, data audits, and discrepancy algorithms.
RESULTS: Of 11,261 screened infants, 8334 were enrolled, and 2927 had insufficient data due to transfer, discharge, or death. Of the enrolled infants, 90% (7483) had a known ROP outcome and were included in the study. Median birth weight was 1070 g (range 310-3000g) and mean gestational age 28 weeks (range 22-35 weeks). Severe ROP (Early Treatment of Retinopathy type 1 or 2) developed in 931 infants (12.5%).
CONCLUSION: Successful incorporation of a predictive model into ROP screening requires confidence that it will capture cases of severe ROP. This dataset provides power to estimate sensitivity with half-confidence interval width of less than 0.5%, determined by the high number of severe ROP cases. The G-ROP Study represents a large, diverse cohort of at-risk infants undergoing ROP screening. It will facilitate evaluation of growth-based algorithms to improve efficiency of ROP screening.
Volume
24
Issue
1
First Page
36
Last Page
47
ISSN
1744-5086
Published In/Presented At
Binenbaum, G., & Tomlinson, L. A. (2017). Postnatal Growth and Retinopathy of Prematurity Study: Rationale, Design, and Subject Characteristics. Ophthalmic epidemiology, 24(1), 36–47. https://doi.org/10.1080/09286586.2016.1255765
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
27996334
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article