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Hospital Medicine

Premature Infants' Survival Is Higher in High-Volume NICUs

By Ronnie Cohen

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Babies born very early stand a better chance of surviving if they are treated in high-volume neonatal ICUs, a new study shows.

The British study included babies born before 33 weeks of gestation.

"The first hours of these babies' lives can be crucial, which means it is essential to give them expert care at this time," said lead author Sam Watson, from the University of Warwick's Medical School and Department of Economics in Coventry, in a news release.

The analysis confirms results of a 2010 U.S. study led by Dr. Judith Chung, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at the University of California, Irvine.

"The best outcomes for high-risk infants occur in hospitals with the highest volume," Chung, who was not involved in the British study, told Reuters Health.

For the new study, the researchers analyzed data from 20,554 very premature infants delivered at 165 hospitals with NICUs across the UK. About 4.5% of them died in the hospital.

Infants were 32% less likely to die if they were admitted to high-volume neonatal units compared to low-volume units, the researchers found.

The earliest preemies, those born before 27 weeks gestation , benefited the most from high-volume units, Watson told Reuters Health.

Those babies had half the odds of dying when they were treated in high-volume units, the authors reported July 7 in BMJ Open.

"The effect we observe is mainly being driven by the infants born at less than 27 weeks," Watson said.

"It would be most important to deliver the youngest fetuses at the highest volume hospital," Chung said.

Why babies are more likely to survive in hospitals that deliver more preemies remains an open question, but researchers suspect clinical experience is key.

"It could be a case of the physicians in the high-volume units have more experience and are more skilled," Watson said. "It is also possible that economies of scale play a role, in that the larger and busier units have more resources to invest in technology and facilities."

Chung likened doctors working in neonatal units with a high volume of preemies to cardiac surgeons who perform the highest number of heart surgeries.

"The assumption is it's probably experience," she said. "If you do more of them, you're better."

Neonatologist Dr. Valencia Walker described the study results as "intuitive."

"Anything we get a chance to perfect, we will get better and better at it if we have the resources to do it," she told Reuters Health.

Walker, from the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA in Los Angeles, was not involved in the current study.

She pointed out that systems to determine where pregnant women deliver their babies in England and the U.S. differ significantly.

In 2003, the UK created a model of networked, regionalized units to facilitate the transfer of premature babies to higher care neonatal units. The current study highlights advantages of the system but also raises concerns about the possible result of smaller neonatal units closing, Watson said.

Walker said the U.S. has far fewer NICUs and a different set of considerations and restrictions regarding transferring patients. In Southern California, for example, traffic can render transfers impossible.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1oVSOkH BMJ Open 2014.

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