Caffeine for Late Preterm Infants: A Double Blind Randomized Controlled Trial
Use of caffeine citrate in late-preterm infants with respiratory distress is questionable. Oliphant and colleagues found in a recently published study that caffeine therapy use in late-preterm infants at a loading dose of 20 and 40 mg/kg and maintenance dose of 10 and 20 mg/kg/day reduces the incidence of intermittent hypoxia events by 61 and 67% respectively. The investigators hypothesized that caffeine will improve respiratory drive, prevent apnea, shorten the hospital stay and improve arousal state in late preterm infants. The investigators aim to study the effect of caffeine citrate on late preterm babies as regard duration of respiratory support, duration of hospital stay, respiratory morbidity, incidence and frequency of apnea.
• Newborn infants at gestational age 34 0/7 through 36 6/7
• Presented with respiratory distress
• Require respiratory support in the form of any of the following :
⁃ A) Invasive mechanical ventilation, B) Non-invasive positive pressure ventilation, C) Nasal cannula with FIO2 requirement over 50% to keep pre-ductal saturation between 90-95%.