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The NANO follow-up study is designed to determine whether a simple, cost-effective intervention- withholding antibiotics at birth- reduces clinically relevant outcomes such as behavioral and neurological impairment at 2 years of age. This study will be the largest study evaluating the effects of early antibiotics in children with comprehensive measures of neurodevelopment linked to genomic variants and microbiota interactions.
Full description
The multidisciplinary team launched the NANO (NICU Antibiotics and Outcomes) Trial to study the longstanding clinical practice of empirically administering intravenous antibiotics to very preterm infants. The NANO trial is an 802-patient,13-site randomized blinded controlled trial (R01HD09757801) discerning whether administration of antibiotics within the first three days of life increases the incidence of short-term, life-threatening complications among very preterm infants.
The proposed NANO follow-up study will build upon the parent NANO trial to determine whether avoiding antibiotics in very preterm infants - a simple, cost-effective intervention - improves neurodevelopmental and behavioral outcomes during the toddler years. Evaluation of children enrolled in the proposed NANO follow-up study will include serial comprehensive, standardized assessments of motor, cognitive, behavioral and adaptive outcomes. To support retention and provide an important early assessment, a first virtual visit at 1 year of age will include the Hammersmith Infant Neurologic Exam (HINE) and the Developmental Assessment of Young Children, Second Edition (DAYC-2). A second comprehensive follow-up visit in person at 2 years will include the Bayley Scales of Infant Development 4th ed., Gross Motor Function Classification System, Child Behavior Checklist for ages 1.5-5, and the Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers, Revised, with Follow-up.
In the NANO follow-up trial, outcomes will be assessed using the Desirability of outcome ranking (DOOR), an innovative, patient-centered statistical approach used in clinical trials to evaluate the global benefits and risks of an intervention. The ordinal neonatal follow-up endpoint composite scale, to be named neoDOOR, will be developed by both clinicians and families. Stakeholder meetings will develop consensus rankings of individual and composite outcomes of different severities reported by the above developmental assessments. Neonatal biospecimens collected during the parent NANO trial will allow for additional exploratory analyses evaluating interactions among genetics, environment, and microbiota with antibiotic exposure and long-term outcomes. Through these assessments and evaluation, the investigators will provide substantial evidence for the use (or non-use) of early antibiotics for very preterm infants at birth.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Families that have agreed to participate and are enrolled in the parent NANO trial will be eligible for the NANO follow-up study. There will be no exclusions for eligible children entering the follow-up study.
Parent NANO trial Criteria:
I. Inclusion criteria: We will enroll newborn infants with gestational age of 23.0-30.6 weeks born to mothers 18 years or older at participating study sites. Only inborn infants at participating study sites will be eligible.
II. Exclusion criteria:
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802 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Rebecca Dorner, MD; Anup Katheria, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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