A predictive model for extubation readiness in extremely preterm infants

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Abstract

Objective: To develop an estimator for predicting successful extubation for an individual preterm infant. Study design: This was a retrospective study that included infants with birth weights ≤1250 g, who were admitted to a tertiary NICU over a 7-year period, received mechanical ventilation and had an elective extubation attempt within 60 days of age. Perinatal and periextubation characteristics were compared in the successful and failed extubation groups. Results: Of 621 screened infants, 312 were included. Extubation succeeded in 73% and failed in 27%. Adjusted factors associated with successful extubation included greater gestational age, chronologic age, pre-extubation pH and lower pre-extubation FiO2, along with lower “peak” respiratory severity score in the first 6 h of age. Conclusions: We used readily available demographic and clinical data to create an extubation readiness estimator that provides the probability of extubation success for an individual preterm infant (http://elasticbeanstalk-us-east-2-676799334712.s3-website.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/).

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Gupta, D., Greenberg, R. G., Sharma, A., Natarajan, G., Cotten, M., Thomas, R., & Chawla, S. (2019). A predictive model for extubation readiness in extremely preterm infants. Journal of Perinatology, 39(12), 1663–1669. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41372-019-0475-x

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