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The purpose of the study is to assess the efficacy and safety of paracetamol in comparison to ibuprofen in the treatment of patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) in preterm infants.
Full description
Although patency of the ductus arteriosus is essential for fetal circulation, the postnatal ductal closure is critical for postnatal circulatory adaptation. In premature infants the circulating prostaglandin levels are higher than at term, and respiratory difficulties may lead to a state of hypoxia, which contribute to the failure of the ductus closure. Recently, an incidental finding in one preterm infant led to look at paracetamol, one of the most common drugs available, as an alternative therapeutic approach to ductal closure. If paracetamol is proven to be effective, it could become the treatment of choice for the management of PDA, mainly due to its more favorable safety profile.
Although the recent results available in the literature demonstrates an highly success rate in ductal closure with paracetamol, all case studies are not powered to show efficacy of paracetamol for PDA closure. Further prospective randomized-controlled trials are needed to evaluate the efficacy of paracetamol versus ibuprofen for the closure of PDA.
If paracetamol is indeed proven to be effective, it could become the treatment of choice for the management of PDA, mainly due to its more favorable side effect profile. In order to test this hypothesis, a randomized, open label, parallel groups, comparator controlled, multicentre, prospective study is proposed.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Male or female preterm infants with no limitation of race.
Gestational age 25(+0) - 31(+6) weeks.
Age 24-72 hours.
Echocardiographic evidence of hemodynamically significant patent ductus arteriosus at the first 24-72 hours of life.
The diagnosis of hemodynamically significant PDA requiring treatment will be made by echocardiographic demonstration of a ductal left-to-right shunt, with a left atrium-to-aortic root ratio >1.3 or a ductal size >1.5 mm and excluding the cases in which the closing flow pattern suggests a restrictive PDA.
Willingness of the parents/legally authorized representative/child to sign the Consent Informed Form.
Exclusion criteria
Outborn patients.
Major congenital anomalies, including but not limited to congenital heart defects, Down syndrome newborn and/or new born suffering from congenital anomalies diagnosed during the fetal period.
Known positive HIV and/or known positive Hepatitis C Virus newborn's mother.
Life threatening infection, complicated or not by multiple organ dysfunction and failure syndrome.
Fetal hydrops.
Pulmonary hypertension diagnosed in the first 24-48 hours of life by means of heart ultrasound when the presence of a right-to-left shunt through the foramen ovale or ductus arteriosus is demonstrated, or when the estimated pulmonary pressure, in terms of the tricuspid regurgitation jet, is greater than two-thirds of the systemic arterial pressure.
Grade 3 or 4 intraventricular haemorrhage (IVH).
Urine output <1 ml/kg of body weight/h during a 24 h collection period or urine output <0.5 ml/kg of body weight/h in case it is measured at 24 hours of life of newborn.
Serum creatinine concentration > 1.5 mg/dl (132 μmol/l).
Platelet count < 50,000/mm3.
Major bleeding, as revealed by hematuria, or blood in the endotracheal aspirate, gastric aspirate, or stools, or consistent oozing of blood from puncture sites.
Severe liver failure, defined as elevated liver enzymes (ALT/Glutamate-Pyruvate Transaminase and Aspartate aminotransferase/GOT) > 2 times the upper boundary of the normal range. For this kind of population the following normal ranges will be considered [Rosenthal, 1997]:
Medical need of administering other Nonsteroidal Antiinflammatory Drug (NSAID) different from ibuprofen.
Participation to another trial involving any investigational drug.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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110 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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