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Caffeine good for preemies

Some adults joke they couldn't live without their morning coffee, but caffeine may be literally life-changing if given as treatment to tiny premature infants.

New research finds that high doses of caffeine therapy given to babies born very early - an average of 27 weeks gestation - reduced their risk of serious disabilities, including cerebral palsy.

"This is really good news for caregivers and parents. We now know that caffeine is definitively a treatment where the benefits outweigh the harms," said the study's lead author, Dr Barbara Schmidt, a professor in the department of clinical epidemiology and biostatistics at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. "This is actually the first drug that has been convincingly shown to reduce disability rates in these children," she added.

Schmidt's team published its findings in a recent issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

Greater disability risk
About 12 percent of American babies are born prematurely, according to the March of Dimes. The earlier a baby is born - normal gestation is 40 weeks, and anything before 37 weeks is considered premature - the more likely that baby is to have serious disabilities if he or she survives.

Because the odds are often against the tiniest babies, neo-natologists quickly put into practice treatments they think might help premature infants survive with the fewest disabilities. Studies on the efficacy of such treatments often follow, and that's the case with caffeine therapy. According to Dr Beverly Brozanski, clinical director of neonatology at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, caffeine therapy has been used to treat premature infants for about 10 years.

Apnoea of prematurity
To answer the question of whether or not caffeine therapy was helping or harming premature infants with a condition known as apnoea of prematurity, Schmidt and her colleagues followed a group of a little more than 2 000 infants from Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom. Apnoea literally means the temporary cessation of breathing, and apnoea of prematurity is a common condition in premature babies, because their lungs and central nervous system aren't yet properly developed.

The babies in the study all weighed between 500 and 1 250 grams and were born at an average of 27 weeks' gestation. Half were randomly assigned to receive caffeine therapy, and the other half were given a placebo. According to Schmidt, the dose given to the babies is equivalent to the amount of caffeine in about six cups of coffee.

In 2006, the researchers published initial results early when they found that babies on caffeine therapy were less likely to suffer from bronchopulmonary dysplasia, a common type of lung damage that occurs in premature babies. However, at the time, they also reported that the babies on caffeine were slightly smaller than the babies on placebo, and growth restriction is always a concern in small babies.

Substantial decrease in mortality
In the current study, the researchers reported their findings when the infants reached two years old. They found that 23 percent fewer babies on caffeine therapy had died or developed a neuro-developmental disability compared to those on placebo.

The incidence of cerebral palsy was 42 percent lower in the caffeine group, and the risk of cognitive delay was 19 percent lower for the caffeine group than the placebo group.

At the two year follow-up, the researchers found no significant differences in height, weight or head circumference.

Schmidt and her colleagues will continue to follow this group of babies and report their findings again when the children are between five and six years old. At that point, they should be able to better assess cognitive and fine motor function, looking for any subtle delays that weren't picked up when the youngsters were two years old.

The researchers believe that about half the benefit of caffeine comes from being able to take babies off mechanical ventilation sooner. They're not sure where the rest of the beneficial effect is coming from, acknowledged Schmidt. Brozanski speculated that it may be that by coming off the ventilator sooner, babies may be getting better nutrition, which would also improve their outcomes.

Whatever the cause of the beneficial effects, Schmidt said, "We now have a drug which we can confidently say can help babies."

"A lot of families worry, and we have always focused on getting babies off medications as soon as we can. But, parents can be reassured. In this group of children, caffeine is beneficial," added Bronzanski. - (Serena Gordon/HealthDay News)

Read more:
Caffeine - good or bad?
Drug for premature birth risky?

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