Page 217 - 16Neonatal Jaundice_compressed
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Appendix H: Evidence tables


 Bibliographic details   Study type and   Patient characteristics   Methodology and interventions   Results   Reviewers Comments
 Evidence level
 Controls: Randomly selected      2) Factors independently associated with
 sample of babies with maximum      severe hyperbilirubinaemia from
 TSB levels < 427 micromol/litre   multivariate regression analysis (adj OR
 after the qualifying TSB (4   with 95% CI)
 controls per case, n = 248)
          GA (compared to 40 weeks as reference)
 Mean BW: 3414 ± 576 g   For 38–39 weeks: 3.1 (1.2–8.0); P = 0.02
 Mean GA: 37.9 + 1.4 weeks   For 34–37 weeks: 3.7 (0.6–22.7); P = 0.15
 Mean age at entry:   Family history of jaundice: 3.8 (0.9–15.7):
 73.1 ± 17.5 hours   P = 0.06
          Bruising on examination: 2.4 (1.2–4.8);
 Gender: Males = 61.3%
 Ethnicity:   P = 0.02
 asian = 29.8%   Exclusive breastfeeding after qualifying
          TSB: 2.0 (1.03–4.0); P = 0.04
 black = 6.8%   TSB increase of = 102 micromol/litre per
          day: 2.5 (1.2–5.5); P = 0.02
 Exclusion criteria:
 infants with resolving jaundice,
 those where TSB levels not   Accuracy of risk factor model in predicting
          severe hyperbilirubinaemia
 documented after a maximum TSB
 recording or decline in TSB not   c-statistic 0.82 (0.76 to 0.88)
 recorded, and those with
 conjugated bilirubin level = 2
 MG/DL

 Keren R et al.;   Study Type:   Infants with BW = 2000 g if   1) Association of risk factors   Prevalence of significant   Retrospective cohort study
    Retrospective   GA = 36 weeks and BW = 2500 g   with significant   hyperbilirubinaemia   Unselected population with well defined
 Year: 2005   cohort   if GA = 35 weeks participating in   hyperbilirubinaemia derived      exclusion criteria
       the hospital’s early discharge   from univariate analysis (at P   Confounding variables controlled
 Country:   Evidence Level: II   programme, and who had both pre   < 0.2)   98/899 (10.9%)   Methodology described adequately

 USA      and post-discharge TSB levels      1) Factors associated with significant   Blinding – not specified
       measured at the phase when ≥ 75%   2) Multivariate regression
 12    babies had both the samples   analysis used to find factors   hyperbilirubinaemia
    (n = 899)   independently associated with
       significant hyperbilirubinaemia   Increased risk
 Group 1: infants with post-     GA < 38 weeks (P = 0.02)
 th
 discharge TSB > 95  centile on   To calculate risk, birthweight   GA ≥ 40 weeks (P = 0.12)
 nomogram   (kg) was transformed by   large for gestational age babies (P = 0.13)
                                    th
    subtracting 2 kg and dividing by   higher pre-discharge TSB risk zone > 76
 n = 98   0.5 kg for every 0.5 kg above   centile (P < 0.001)
 2.5 kg
 mean BW: 3.4 ± 0.5 kg      breastfeeding (P < 0.001)
 mean GA: Not reported   3) Comparison of diagnostic   combined breast and bottle feeding
 Gender: males = 54.1%   accuracy of the risk factor score   (P = 0.02)
          maternal diabetes (P = 0.17)
 Ethnicity:   (derived from regression   vacuum extraction (P < 0.001)
 White = 45.9%   modeling) with that of pre-  prolonged rupture (P = 0.08)
 Black = 31.6%   discharge TSB levels in
 Asian = 10.2%   predicting significant   oxytocin use (P = 0.002)

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