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Last updated on February 13, 2012 at 0:10 EST

Nitric oxide helps some premature babies – studies

July 26, 2006

By Gene Emery

BOSTON (Reuters) – Letting some premature babies inhale
small amounts of nitric oxide may prevent a potentially fatal
lung disease known as bronchopulmonary dysplasia, two studies
showed on Wednesday.

Thousands of babies are born each year in the United States
with lungs too immature to properly mix inhaled air with blood
so that the oxygen can be pumped to the cells of the body.
Progress in fighting the problem, which can cause brain damage,
has been limited.

The studies published in this week’s New England Journal of
Medicine said their findings were not conclusive enough to
recommend routine treatment and that further tests were needed
to ensure a child’s development was not harmed.

They also used different strategies to deliver nitric
oxide, a compound that plays a key role in the heart and
circulatory system, to their tiny patients.

One study led by John Kinsella of the University of
Colorado School of Medicine involved giving the gas soon after
birth and found that the treatment only seemed to help babies
weighing at least 2.2 pounds (1 kg).

But it cut their risk of lung problems in half. It didn’t
show a breathing benefit for smaller babies who were on
ventilators and received the gas. But for all babies who took
part in the test it halved the risk of brain damage.

“We are optimistic that this therapy could prevent
long-term developmental and neurological problems in many of
these children,” Kinsella said.

The 793 babies in 16 centers started receiving the gas or a
placebo when they were less than 48 hours old.

COST OF TREATMENT CITED

The other study led by Roberta Ballard of Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia gave 582 babies nitric oxide or a
placebo only after they were at least seven days old.

Those researchers found that, after 36 weeks, 44 percent of
the nitric oxide recipients were free of bronchopulmonary
dysplasia versus 37 percent who got a placebo gas.

“As compared with infants who received placebo gas, infants
who were treated with inhaled nitric oxide were hospitalized
for fewer days, needed supplemental oxygen for a shorter
period, and had less severe disease,” the Ballard team said.

Ballard told Reuters that the Kinsella team may not have
seen significant improvement in some babies because they may
have halted the treatment too soon.

At a cost of about $3,000 per day, or as much as $12,000
for a month of therapy, nitric oxide for premature newborns “is
difficult to justify until benefit is proven,” said Ann Stark
of Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, whose editorial in the
Journal recommends that “the use of inhaled nitric oxide in
this setting should be limited to clinical trials.”

About 10,000 newborns develop bronchopulmonary dysplasia in
the United States each year.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the gas
for full-term babies with breathing problems.

Its use in smaller infants is of intense interest for
doctors because about one in three babies who weigh less than
2.75 pounds (1,25 grams) at birth have the disease and need
supplemental oxygen.

Of those, at least 10 percent have evidence of brain
injury.


Source: reuters