Contemporary definitions of infant growth failure and neurodevelopmental and behavioral outcomes in extremely premature infants at two years of age

J Perinatol. 2024 Jan 9. doi: 10.1038/s41372-023-01852-9. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Associations of 2-year neurodevelopmental and behavioral outcomes with growth trajectories of preterm infants are unknown.

Methods: This secondary analysis of a preterm cohort examined in-hospital and discharge to 2-year changes in anthropometric z-scores. Two-year follow-up included Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID-III) and Child Behavior Checklist.

Results: Among 590 infants, adjusted in-hospital growth was not associated with any BSID-III subscale. Occipitofrontal circumference (OFC) growth failure (GF) in-hospital was associated with increased adjusted odds of attention problems (aOR 1.65 [1.03, 2.65]), aggressive behavior (aOR 2.34 [1.12, 4.89]), and attention-deficit-hyperactivity symptoms (aOR 1.86 [1.05, 3.30]). Infants with OFC GF at 2 years had lower adjusted BSID-III language scores (-4.0 [-8.0, -0.1]), increased odds of attention problems (aOR 2.29 [1.11, 4.74]), aggressive behavior (aOR 3.09 [1.00, 9.56]), and externalizing problems (aOR 3.01 [1.07, 8.45]) compared to normal OFC growth cohort.

Conclusion: Infants with OFC GF are at risk for neurodevelopmental and behavioral impairment.

Clinical trial registration: This study is a secondary analysis of pre-existing data from the PENUT Trial Registration: NCT01378273.

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT01378273