![](transpixel.gif) ![BULLETIN HOME](images/bulletin_homebulletin_home.gif)
![VISITING ON CAMPUS](images/visitingvisiting_on_campus.gif)
![CALENDAR OF EVENTS](images/calendarcalendar_of_events.gif)
![IN THE NEWS](images/newsin_the_news.gif)
![BULLETIN BOARD](images/bulletin_boardbulletin_boar.gif)
![CLASSIFIED ADS](images/classifiedsclassified_ads.gif)
![](transpixel.gif)
![SEARCH ARCHIVES](images/archivessearch_archives.gif)
![DEADLINES](images/deadlinedeadlines.gif)
![DOWNLOAD FORMS](images/downloaddownload_forms.gif)
![BULLETIN STAFF](images/staffbulletin_staff.gif)
![](transpixel.gif)
![PUBLIC AFFAIRS HOME](images/opapublic_affairs_home.gif)
![NEWS RELEASES](images/releasesnews_releases.gif)
![E-MAIL US](images/emailuse_mail_us.gif)
![](transpixel.gif)
![YALE HOME PAGE](images/yalehomeyale_home_page.gif)
|
|
Study identifies factors that predict premature babies’ survivability,
disability
Gestational age has long been the factor most commonly used to predict whether
an extremely low-birth-weight infant survives and thrives, but four additional
factors that can help predict a preemie’s outcome have been identified
by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Neonatal Research Network, of which
Yale is a member.
Birth weight, gender, whether the baby is a twin and whether the mother was
given antenatal steroid medication to aid the baby’s lung development
are all factors that affect survivability and risk of disability, according
to an article in the New England Journal of Medicine by a consortium of researchers
in the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development (NICHD) Neonatal Research Network. The 19-center network includes
Yale School of Medicine and Yale-New Haven Hospital.
The study was a statistical analysis of the health records of 4,446 children
born between 22 and 25 weeks of pregnancy and weighing between 401 and 1,000
grams (about one to two pounds) at birth. Researchers examined which factors,
aside from gestational age, influenced the outcomes for extremely low-birth-weight
infants. They used a statistical tool called an outcome estimator to assess
survival. The researchers found that an infant’s chances of survival
without disability were enhanced if they were of older gestational age, their
mothers had been given antenatal steroids, they were female, they were singletons
rather than part of a multiple birth and they had higher birth weight.
“There is a grey zone of survivability at different gestational ages, and
it is impossible to predict the outcome with perfect accuracy, but these new
statistical tools are a tremendous aid to us as physicians, particularly when
counseling parents faced with agonizing decisions for their extreme preemies,” says
Dr. Mark Mercurio, associate professor of pediatrics at Yale School of Medicine,
attending neonatologist at Yale-New Haven Hospital and chair of the Pediatric
Ethics Committee. “We are able to give parents a better idea of what the
child’s chances of survival are, and in many cases we defer to the judgment
of informed parents.”
Mercurio notes that, in addition to predicting survivability, the factors also
help paint a clearer picture of the chances of disability. Developmental problems
commonly affecting extremely premature infants include cerebral palsy, mental
impairment, vision impairment and hearing loss. The team used standardized
measures of mental development, vision and hearing to assess the health status
of surviving infants when they were 18 to 22 months. Forty-nine percent of
the infants in the study had died, 21% survived without disability, and the
remainder experienced some disability.
An online tool for physicians and parents that generates statistics based on
the factors identified in the study is available at www.nichd.nih.gov/about/org/cdbpm/pp/prog_epbo. The NIH cautions that the Web tool is not a substitute for a physician’s
careful assessment of individual cases.
— By Karen Peart
T H I S W E E K ' S S T O R I E S
![](red_dot.gif) Findings may explain how cancer spreads
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Students learning to blend economic savvy and environmental . . .
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Outreach programs showing city students science is . . .
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Students demonstrate energy-harvesting designs
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Alumnus Stephen Pitti named new master of Ezra Stiles College
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Former Norwalk mayor Alex Knopp chosen to head Dwight Hall
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Study identifies factors that predict premature babies’ survivability . . .
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Center celebrates decade of shaping graduate student life
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Library acquires alumnus’ images of a changing Iowa
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Staff member’s Mt. McKinley climb will support cancer research
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Carlotta Festival showcases work of graduating playwrights
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Celebrated writers will discuss their craft in Yale Library talk
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Researchers trace chlorine’s irritative effect to a specific nerve receptor
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Student Research Day to feature prize-winning presentations . . .
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Inaugural James Weldon Johnson Fellow to research . . .
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Researcher Kenneth Pugh, a reading specialist, is appointed . . .
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Conference to explore psychosocial and physical dimensions of . . .
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Memorial service for Dr. Steven C. Hebert
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Yale Books in Brief
![](transpixel.gif)
![](red_dot.gif) Campus Notes
![](transpixel.gif)
Bulletin Home | Visiting on Campus | Calendar of Events | In the News
![](transpixel.gif) Bulletin Board | Classified Ads | Search Archives | Deadlines
![](transpixel.gif) Bulletin Staff | Public Affairs | News Releases |
E-Mail Us | Yale Home
|