A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

PERFECT preterm infant study




AuthorsLiisa Lehtonen, Liisi Rautava, Emmi Korvenranta, Heikki Korvenranta, Mikko Peltola, Unto Häkkinen

Publication year2011

JournalAnnals of Medicine

Number in series1

Volume43

Issue1

First page S47

Last pageS53

Number of pages7

ISSN0785-3890

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3109/07853890.2011.586359


Abstract

Introduction. This article summarizes the main findings of the preterm infant sub-study of the Performance, Effectiveness and Costs of Treatment episodes (PERFECT) study. We studied effects of birth hospital level and time of birth on mortality and morbidity and cost-effectiveness of care of very low gestational age (VLGA)/very low birth weight (VLBW) infants.
Material and Methods. The study included all infants born below 32 weeks or 1501 g in Finland in 2000–2007. Different cohorts were used depending on the time point.
Results. The one-year mortality of live-born VLBW/VLGA infants was higher if born in level II versus level III hospitals, or if born during out-of-office hours in level II versus office hours in level III hospitals. Two out of three VLGA/VLBW subjects did not have any of the prematurity-related morbidities studied. The average cost of quality-adjusted life years was €19,245 by four years of age; the cost was higher in VLGA/VLBW infants with long-term morbidities.
Discussion. Birth in a level III hospital improved survival of VLGA/VLBW infants. Results suggest inadequate overnight competence in small hospitals. Despite high initial costs, care of VLGA/VLBW infants was already cost-effective by four years of age. Cost-effectiveness can be improved by reducing long-term morbidities.



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