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High Intensity Phototherapy: Double vs. Single

A

Aalborg University Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hyperbilirubinemia

Treatments

Other: Light irradiance

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02805296
N-20140010

Details and patient eligibility

About

Intensive phototherapy in form of double light is used worldwide in the treatment of severe neonatal hyperbilirubinemia. It has been debated if there is an upper limit on the efficiency of phototherapy. This study investigates whether double phototherapy reduces total serum bilirubin faster than single light during intensive phototherapy, using light emitting diodes, and whether there is an upper limit for the efficacy of phototherapy.

Full description

Hyperbilirubinemia occurs in 60 - 80 % of newborns during the first days of life, among others because of immaturity of the enzyme uridin-glukuronosyl-transferase (UGT1A1) in the liver. In seldom cases with very high total serum bilirubin concentration (TsB), bilirubin can cross the blood-brain barrier and the deposition of unconjugated bilirubin in the central nervous system may cause acute bilirubin encephalopathy (ABE). This can progress to chronic bilirubin encephalopathy (CBE), a devastating condition, which unfortunately still occurs, even in industrialised countries.

Hyperbilirubinemia gets severe for 2 - 6 % of infants born at term or late preterm, which means, they need treatment to prevent ABE and the treatment of choice is phototherapy due to its efficacy and safety. Hereby bilirubin in the skin and plasma is converted to photobilirubins; they are water-soluble and can be excreted through the liver without conjugation. They are presumably non-toxic. In most departments, single phototherapy is first choice. To avoid the above-mentioned damaging condition, it is very important to optimize phototherapy.

Former fluorescent tubes were used as light source, but now light emission diodes (LED) are used.

This study investigates whether double phototherapy reduces total serum bilirubin faster than single light during intensive phototherapy, using LED, and whether there is an upper limit for the efficacy of phototherapy.

It is a prospective, randomised controlled study. The infants will be randomized to either 1: Conventional phototherapy with blue LED light from above and a distance from light source to mattress of 30 cm, giving a light irradiance of 66 µW/cm2/nm or 2: Conventional phototherapy combined with a light blanket (Bilisoft) with a light irradiance by the skin of 39 µW/cm2/nm. TsB will be measured at start and after 12 - and 24 h of treatment. Based on the calculation of strength 72 infants will be needed in this study. As statistical methods t-tests will be used and multiple linear regression models will be used to adjust for confounding.

Enrollment

83 patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 to 14 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Otherwise healthy newborn infants with hyperbilirubinemia without signs of hemolytic disease
  • gestational age ≥33 weeks
  • birth weight ≥1800 g
  • The infants should be treatable in a cradle

Exclusion criteria

  • Infants fulfilling the indications for exchange transfusion or double phototherapy due to a very high initial or rapidly increasing TsB will not be enrolled.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

83 participants in 2 patient groups

Double light
Active Comparator group
Description:
High-intensity phototherapy with blue LED light from above combined with a fiber optic, blue LED blanket from below. Intervention: Light irradiance: 66 µW/cm2/nm + 39 µW/cm2/nm
Treatment:
Other: Light irradiance
Single light
Active Comparator group
Description:
High-intensity phototherapy with blue LED light from above. Intervention: Light irradiance: 66 µW/cm2/nm
Treatment:
Other: Light irradiance

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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