Background: The severity of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is an important predictor of prognosis in preterm infants. However, the severity of BPD was determined mainly by the degree of oxygen supplementation and mode of respiratory support.
Objectives: This retrospective study aimed to examine the role of partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2 ) in predicting rehospitalization among preterm infants with severe BPD without invasive ventilation at 36 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA).
Methods: We assessed preterm infants aged <32 gestational weeks with severe BPD who were receiving noninvasive respiratory support at 36 weeks' PMA. Patients were compared after stratifying them according to the history of rehospitalization owing to respiratory infection before a corrected age (CA) of 1 year and pCO2 measured by capillary blood gas analysis at 36 weeks' PMA.
Results: Among 54 infants who had severe BPD with noninvasive respiratory support at 36 weeks' PMA, 16 (29.6%) experienced rehospitalization due to respiratory problems. At 36 weeks' PMA, the amount of oxygen supplementation (0.30 vs. 0.28, p = 0.021) and pCO2 (62.1 vs. 53.6 mmHg, p = 0.006) were higher in the rehospitalization group than in the no rehospitalization group. Multivariate logistic analysis findings indicated that pCO2 ≥ 57.4 mmHg was the only factor associated with rehospitalization (adjusted odds ratio: 8.017, 95% confidence interval 1.239-51.859).
Conclusion: High pCO2 during noninvasive respiratory support at 36 weeks' PMA in severe BPD was associated with rehospitalization. Consideration of the degree of impairment in ventilatory capacity may improve the prediction of later respiratory outcomes in infants with BPD.
Keywords: bronchopulmonary dysplasia; hypercapnia; preterm infant; rehospitalization.
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