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Active clinical trials for "Premature Birth"

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Odors to Insufflate Life

Premature Newborns With Gestational Age 28 to 33 Weeks

Apneas concern about 85% of premature newborns (NB) born after less than 34 weeks of pregnancy. They are considered as an important risk factor for subsequent neuropsychological deficiency. Current pharmacological treatments are not very effective, and have side effects (agitation, irritability, sleep disorders, tachycardia). Some studies suggest that in NBs with apneas resisting to drugs, a permanent odorisation with a drop of vanillin on the incubator's pillow might reduce the frequency of apneas. This latin square design study will test a controlled olfactory stimulation method, i.e. an olfactometer which controls the odor duration, intensity, and sequence using three different odors, to reduce apneic episodes measured using 24-registration of heart and respiratory rates.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Preterm Functional Early Enteral Development (FEED) Trial on Respiratory Support

Premature Birth

The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that allowing infants that require high flow nasal cannula (HFNC)/Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) to orally feed if demonstrating oral cues will achieve full oral feeds faster.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Implementation of an Evidence Based Parentally Administered Intervention for Preterm Infants

Premature InfantsParent-Child Relations

Early developmentally-based behavioral intervention has well-established positive effects and is recommended as the standard of care to support early brain maturation, health, and development. However, few neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) provide this early intervention. H-HOPE (Hospital to Home: Optimizing the Preterm Infant's Environment) has established efficacy, and has a standardized protocol, making it ready for widespread implementation. The infant-directed component of H-HOPE provides Auditory (voice), Tactile (moderate touch massage), Visual (eye to eye), and Vestibular (rocking) stimulation starting when infants are ready for social interaction. The parent-directed component of H-HOPE includes participatory guidance and support to help parents engage with infants in the NICU and the transition to home. In this NIH-funded research, H-HOPE improved growth, developmental maturity and mother-infant interaction, and reduced initial hospitalization costs and acute care visits through 6-weeks corrected age. This research tests whether H-HOPE can be implemented and sustained in five diverse NICUs, using a Type 3 Hybrid design to evaluate both implementation processes and effectiveness. The specific aims are to: 1) Identify the degree of implementation success; 2) Evaluate the effectiveness of H-HOPE for infants, hospital costs from H-HOPE enrollment until discharge, and parents, compared to a pre-implementation comparison cohort; and 3) Determine influences (facilitators and barriers) associated with implementation success and H-HOPE effectiveness, guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). An incomplete stepped-wedge design guides staggered roll-out for five clinical sites. Each NICU completes the CFIR implementation steps (Planning and Engaging, Executing, and Reflecting and Evaluating), followed by 6 months of Sustaining. For Aim 1, degree of implementation success is determined every two months as Sustainability (still offering H-HOPE), Reach (% of eligible parent/infant dyads receiving H-HOPE) and Degree of Implementation (mean H-HOPE services received per parent-infant unit) (primary implementation outcomes). For Aim 2, effectiveness is analyzed using generalized linear mixed models for infant, cost, and parent outcomes (primary outcomes: infant growth at discharge and acute care visits from discharge to 6-weeks corrected age). Propensity score analysis is used to make the pre- and post-implementation comparable. For Aim 3, a mixed methods analyses is used to identify influences from H-HOPE records and interviews that are associated with implementation success and effectiveness at each site and across sites. This is the first time implementation in a NICU is guided by the evidence-based CFIR framework, and results will make a major contribution to implementation science. This study will produce an evidence-based implementation strategy and Toolkit to disseminate nationwide. Widespread H-HOPE implementation will make a significant change in clinical practice and improve preterm infant health and health care costs.

Recruiting25 enrollment criteria

Effects of Music Based Intervention (MBI) on Pain Response and Neurodevelopment in Preterm Infants...

Preterm BirthPain

Pilot prospective randomized, double blinded, controlled study to test effect of music based intervention (MBI) on pain response and neurodevelopment in preterm infants.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

To Optimize Antenatal Management of Women With Pre Term Labor Using Amniocentesis

Preterm BirthPreterm Labor2 more

Implementation of prediction models of risk of spontaneous delivery within 7 days or of intra-amniotic infection in women with preterm labor and intact membranes

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Premature Discontinuation of Contraceptive Implants

Contraception Behavior

To compare rates of etonogestrel implant discontinuation in implant initiators who are given advance provision of combined oral contraceptive pills (COCs) and a bleeding rescue regimen (COCR intervention) to participants given standard counseling (comparator).

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Selective Early Medical Treatment of Patent Ductus Arteriosus in Extremely Low Gestational Age Infants:...

Patent Ductus Arteriosus After Premature Birth

Background: Among preterm infants, those born at a gestational age less than 26 weeks are considered the most vulnerable with a high risk of short- and long-term health problems that include chronic lung disease, brain bleeds, gut injury, kidney failure and death. Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is the most common heart condition with almost 70% preterm infants in this gestational age group being diagnosed with a PDA. Though many PDAs spontaneously resolve on their own, research suggests that if the PDA persists, it may contribute to a number of these short- and long-term health problems. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications such as ibuprofen are commonly used to treat a PDA. Such drugs can also have harmful effects on the gut and kidneys of extremely preterm infants. Therefore, we are unsure if early treatment of a symptomatic PDA in this age group is at all beneficial. Given the wide variation in PDA treatment approaches in this age group, a randomized trial design, where extremely preterm infants with a symptomatic PDA are randomly assigned to early treatment or no early treatment, is essential to address this question. Purpose of the study: The overall purpose of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility of conducting a large study to explore the following research question: In preterm infants born <26 weeks' gestation, is a strategy of selective early medical treatment of a symptomatic PDA better than no treatment at all in the first week of life? The main feasibility objectives of this study are: To assess how many eligible infants can be enrolled in the study To assess how many enrolled infants properly complete the study protocol Importance: To our knowledge this will be the first study on PDA management in preterm infants that specifically aims to enroll preterm infants born at <26 weeks of gestational age who are at the highest risk for PDA-related problems but have been mostly under-represented in previous PDA studies.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Listening to Mom 2: Neural, Clinical and Language Outcomes

Premature Birth

The purpose of this study is to examine whether playing recordings of a mother's voice to her infant while in the hospital nursery is an effective treatment for promoting healthy brain and language development in infants born preterm.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Nasal Olfactory Stimulation and Its Effect on Respiratory Drive in Preterm Infants

Apnea of PrematurityPrematurity3 more

This trial analyzes the effect of an olfactory stimulation with vanilla or strawberry aroma compared to placebo on desaturations and bradycardia in preterm infants with apnea of prematurity. Infants on continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) support will be included and the aroma will be applied to the inner surface of the CPAP mask using designated scent pens. The trial uses a cross-over design. Infants are randomised to begin the study with either aroma or placebo which will be applied into the breathing mask every 3 to 4 hours during 12 hours for each of the two intervention periods. Identically looking pens with either aroma or placebo are used and patients, parents, medical staff and the study team are blinded to this allocation. Infants are monitored with an oximetry sensor to measure peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) and pulse rate.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Outpatient Antibiotics Following Previable Rupture of Membranes (pPPROM) Between 18 0/7 and 22 6/7...

Pregnancy PretermPregnancy Prom5 more

A randomized, controlled, non-placebo trial to primarily assess the effect of oral, outpatient antibiotics (i.e., azithromycin and amoxicillin) on latency (i.e., proportion of patients that deliver within 28 days from membrane rupture) following previable, prelabor rupture of membranes between 18 0/7 and 22 6/7 weeks gestational age.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria
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