Fidgety movements in infants born very preterm: predictive value for cerebral palsy in a clinical multicentre setting.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
June 2017
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Author
Datta, Alexandre N | |
Furrer, Mark A | |
Bernhardt, Iris | |
Hüppi, Petra S | |
Borradori-Tolsa, Cristina | |
Bucher, Hans Ulrich | |
Latal, Beatrice | |
Natalucci, Giancarlo |
Subject(s)
Series
Developmental medicine and child neurology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0012-1622
Publisher
Blackwell
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
28102574
Description
AIM
This study assessed predictive values of fidgety movement assessment (FMA) in a large sample of infants born very preterm for developmental abnormalities, in particular for cerebral palsy (CP) at 2 years in an everyday clinical setting.
METHOD
This is a multicentre study of infants born preterm with gestational age lower than 32.0 weeks. FMA was performed at 3 months corrected age; neurodevelopment (Bayley Scales of Infant Development, 2nd edition) and neurological abnormalities were assessed at 2 years. Predictive values of FMA for the development of CP were calculated and combined with abnormalities at cerebral ultrasound.
RESULTS
Five hundred and thirty-five infants (gestational age 28.2wks [standard deviation 1.3wks]) were included. Eighty-one percent showed normal fidgety movements and 19% atypical (82 absent, 21 abnormal) fidgety movements. Absent fidgety movements predicted CP at 2 years with an odds ratio (OR) of 8.9 (95% confidence interval [CI] 4.1-17.0), a combination of atypical fidgety movements and major brain lesion on cerebral ultrasound predicted it with an OR of 17.8 (95% CI 5.2-61.6). Mean mental developmental index of infants with absent fidgety movements was significantly lower (p=0.012) than with normal fidgety movements.
INTERPRETATION
Detection of infants at risk for later CP through FMA was good, but less robust when performed in a routine clinical setting; prediction improved when combined with neonatal cerebral ultrasound.
This study assessed predictive values of fidgety movement assessment (FMA) in a large sample of infants born very preterm for developmental abnormalities, in particular for cerebral palsy (CP) at 2 years in an everyday clinical setting.
METHOD
This is a multicentre study of infants born preterm with gestational age lower than 32.0 weeks. FMA was performed at 3 months corrected age; neurodevelopment (Bayley Scales of Infant Development, 2nd edition) and neurological abnormalities were assessed at 2 years. Predictive values of FMA for the development of CP were calculated and combined with abnormalities at cerebral ultrasound.
RESULTS
Five hundred and thirty-five infants (gestational age 28.2wks [standard deviation 1.3wks]) were included. Eighty-one percent showed normal fidgety movements and 19% atypical (82 absent, 21 abnormal) fidgety movements. Absent fidgety movements predicted CP at 2 years with an odds ratio (OR) of 8.9 (95% confidence interval [CI] 4.1-17.0), a combination of atypical fidgety movements and major brain lesion on cerebral ultrasound predicted it with an OR of 17.8 (95% CI 5.2-61.6). Mean mental developmental index of infants with absent fidgety movements was significantly lower (p=0.012) than with normal fidgety movements.
INTERPRETATION
Detection of infants at risk for later CP through FMA was good, but less robust when performed in a routine clinical setting; prediction improved when combined with neonatal cerebral ultrasound.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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Datta_et_al-2017-Developmental_Medicine_&_Child_Neurology.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 241.97 KB | publisher | published |