Discussion
Findings from the systematic review were published in the journal of Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology (DMCN) in 2021 and outcomes of the cohort study in DMCN in March 2023.
The new and important information added by the systematic review showed that the General Movement Assessment (GMA) has predictive validity for both motor and cognitive dysfunction in infants born very preterm.
Of the 104 infants recruited to the cohort study, 79 completed outcome assessments (43 females, 36 males; gestational age 30 weeks [SD one week 6 days], mean birthweight 1346 g [SD 323]). The incidence of developmental delay (motor or cognitive) was n=5, 6.3%. Suboptimal quality of fidgety general movements (temporal organization and quality of movement) at 16 weeks corrected age demonstrated the best predictive accuracy for motor and cognitive delay. GMA trajectories with abnormal writhing at four to five weeks CA and suboptimal quality of fidgety movement at 16 weeks CA (intermittent, sporadic, abnormal, absent) were strongly predictive of developmental delay, superior to all other clinical tools and perinatal/demographic variables investigated.
Overall, we found that when assessment of GMA trajectories commences at 34-35 weeks gestational age and includes assessment at the specific timepoints of four to five and 16 weeks CA, there is sufficient predictive validity to identify both typical outcome and developmental delay and differentiate risk for motor and cognitive outcomes at 24 months corrected age.
Lessons learnt
As our team was inexperienced with research methods, collaboration with expert partners was an essential part of initiating and progressing the PREMTiME study. A committed multidisciplinary team, robust change management processes and our partnerships with management and funders has provided the framework that has supported the initiative across more than a decade of research.
References
Caesar R, Boyd RN, Colditz P, Cioni G, Ware RS, Salthouse K, et al. Early prediction of typical outcome and mild developmental delay for prioritisation of service delivery for very preterm and very low birthweight infants: a study protocol. BMJ Open. 2016;6(7).
Caesar R, Colditz PB, Cioni G, Boyd RN. Clinical tools used in young infants born very preterm to predict motor and cognitive delay (not cerebral palsy): a systematic review. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2021;63(4):387-95.
Caesar, RA, Boyd, RN, Cioni, G, Ware, RS, Doherty, J, Jackson, MP, et al. Early detection of developmental delay in infants born very preterm or with very low birthweight. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2023; 65(3): 346–357. https://doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.15381
Further Reading
https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:b9d81c0