ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Transcutaneous Bilirubin Measurements in Neonates Post Phototherapy

NHS Trust logo

NHS Trust

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Jaundice, Neonatal

Treatments

Device: Transcutaneous Bilirubin Meter - 'Bilimeter'

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04719104
GN20HP515

Details and patient eligibility

About

Can transcutaneous bilirubin (TcB) measurements be utilised to assess rebound hyperbilirubinaemia following phototherapy in neonates?

Full description

Jaundice is common in the newborn and may result in the need for babies to be readmitted from home for phototherapy, with associated increased costs and significant family distress.

As well as prolonged hospital stay, neonates on phototherapy require multiple blood tests (SBR), generally acquired via heel prick testing. These cause the baby discomfort and samples may be insufficient or haemolyzed and require repeating. There is also a delay of one to two hours at best in results being received and actioned.

Jaundice measurements can also be obtained using non-invasive, cheap and reliable meters (TcB) that give almost immediate results. The meter takes one to two minutes to get a result and can be used at the cotside. TcB causes the baby no significant discomfort.

TcB meters are commonly used before phototherapy but are not routinely used during or after stopping phototherapy. Jaundice commonly worsens after stopping phototherapy due to release of bilirubin from tissues and so measuring a "rebound" SBR twelve hours after stopping phototherapy and before the baby can go home is routine practice.

TcB meters tend to underestimate SBR in the first eight hours after stopping phototherapy but there is some evidence that thereafter they may provide reliable results. If TcB measurements can be used as a reliable predictor for SBR twelve hours after phototherapy, this will reduce blood sampling and costs, causing less distress to the baby and their mother, with potential for earlier discharge home. The NICE guideline for neonatal jaundice suggests that new research is needed to evaluate the accuracy of different transcutaneous bilirubinometers in comparison to serum bilirubin levels in all babies.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 to 14 days old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Well neonates
  • 35+0 weeks gestation or greater, over 24 hours old
  • Inpatients at Princess Royal Maternity (PRM), NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde

Exclusion criteria

  • Unwell neonates
  • Less than 35+0 weeks' gestation
  • Less than 24 hours old
  • Mother unable or too distressed to give informed consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

200 participants in 1 patient group

Participating group of neonates
Experimental group
Description:
Participating group: Neonates that have had both a serum bilirubin measurement and transcutaneous measurement post phototherapy. This is a single arm study as we are only targeting one group of individuals with the intervention (transcutaneous bilirubin measurement). However, we will compare the serum bilirubin measurement to the transcutaneous measurement from the same neonate to determine if there is a clinically significant difference between the two measurements.
Treatment:
Device: Transcutaneous Bilirubin Meter - 'Bilimeter'

Trial contacts and locations

0

Loading...

Central trial contact

Frances Butterworth, MBChB; Helen Mactier, MBChB

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems