A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures

Abstract Background There is increasing evidence that neonatal seizures in term neonates with stroke, asphyxia or brain haemorrhage might be associated with adverse neurodevelopment and development of epilepsy. The extent of this association is not known. The objective of this study was to assess th...

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Main Authors: T. R. De Haan, J. Langeslag, J. H. van der Lee, A. H. van Kaam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-05-01
Series:BMC Pediatrics
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-018-1116-9
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spelling doaj-e1111a54fef84b74b639535f4b40847f2020-11-25T00:55:11ZengBMCBMC Pediatrics1471-24312018-05-011811710.1186/s12887-018-1116-9A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizuresT. R. De Haan0J. Langeslag1J. H. van der Lee2A. H. van Kaam3Department of Neonatology, Emma Children’s Hospital, Academic Medical CenterDepartment of Neonatology, Emma Children’s Hospital, Academic Medical CenterPediatric clinical Research Office, Emma Children’s Hospital, Academic Medical CenterDepartment of Neonatology, Emma Children’s Hospital, Academic Medical CenterAbstract Background There is increasing evidence that neonatal seizures in term neonates with stroke, asphyxia or brain haemorrhage might be associated with adverse neurodevelopment and development of epilepsy. The extent of this association is not known. The objective of this study was to assess the possible impact of neonatal seizures on these outcomes and if possible calculate a relative risk. Methods A systematic review and meta-analysis was performed (study period January 2000–June 2015). PubMed, Medline and Embase were searched for cohort studies evaluating neurodevelopmental outcome at the age of at least 18 months or development of epilepsy in surviving term neonates with or without neonatal seizures. The methodological quality of included studies was assessed and data extractions were performed in a standardized manner by independent reviewers. Pooled Relative Risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals for adverse outcome were calculated if possible. Results Out of 1443 eligible studies 48 were selected for full text reading leaving 9 cohort studies for the final analyses (4 studies on stroke, 4 on perinatal asphyxia and one on cerebral hemorrhage). For all cases with stroke or asphyxia combined the pooled risk ratio (RR) for adverse outcome when suffering neonatal seizures was 7.42 (3.84–14.34); for neonates with perinatal asphyxia: 8.41 (4.07–17.39) and for neonates with stroke: 4.95 (1.07–23.0). The pooled RR for development of late onset epilepsy could only be determined for infants suffering from stroke: 1.48 (0.82–2.68). Results were biased and evidence sparse. Conclusions The presence of neonatal seizures in term newborns with vascular or hypoxic brain injury may have an impact on or be a predictor of neurodevelopmental outcome. The biased available data yield insufficient evidence about the true size of this association.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-018-1116-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author T. R. De Haan
J. Langeslag
J. H. van der Lee
A. H. van Kaam
spellingShingle T. R. De Haan
J. Langeslag
J. H. van der Lee
A. H. van Kaam
A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures
BMC Pediatrics
author_facet T. R. De Haan
J. Langeslag
J. H. van der Lee
A. H. van Kaam
author_sort T. R. De Haan
title A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures
title_short A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures
title_full A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures
title_fullStr A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures
title_sort systematic review comparing neurodevelopmental outcome in term infants with hypoxic and vascular brain injury with and without seizures
publisher BMC
series BMC Pediatrics
issn 1471-2431
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Background There is increasing evidence that neonatal seizures in term neonates with stroke, asphyxia or brain haemorrhage might be associated with adverse neurodevelopment and development of epilepsy. The extent of this association is not known. The objective of this study was to assess the possible impact of neonatal seizures on these outcomes and if possible calculate a relative risk. Methods A systematic review and meta-analysis was performed (study period January 2000–June 2015). PubMed, Medline and Embase were searched for cohort studies evaluating neurodevelopmental outcome at the age of at least 18 months or development of epilepsy in surviving term neonates with or without neonatal seizures. The methodological quality of included studies was assessed and data extractions were performed in a standardized manner by independent reviewers. Pooled Relative Risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals for adverse outcome were calculated if possible. Results Out of 1443 eligible studies 48 were selected for full text reading leaving 9 cohort studies for the final analyses (4 studies on stroke, 4 on perinatal asphyxia and one on cerebral hemorrhage). For all cases with stroke or asphyxia combined the pooled risk ratio (RR) for adverse outcome when suffering neonatal seizures was 7.42 (3.84–14.34); for neonates with perinatal asphyxia: 8.41 (4.07–17.39) and for neonates with stroke: 4.95 (1.07–23.0). The pooled RR for development of late onset epilepsy could only be determined for infants suffering from stroke: 1.48 (0.82–2.68). Results were biased and evidence sparse. Conclusions The presence of neonatal seizures in term newborns with vascular or hypoxic brain injury may have an impact on or be a predictor of neurodevelopmental outcome. The biased available data yield insufficient evidence about the true size of this association.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-018-1116-9
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