Dopamine vs. Norepinephrine for Hypotension in Very Preterm Infants With Late-onset Sepsis: An International Comparative Effectiveness Research Project
Objective: To compare the relative effectiveness and safety of pharmacologically equivalent dosages of DA versus NE for primary pharmacotherapy for fluid-unresponsive hypotension in preterm infants born ≤ 32 weeks gestational age with suspected LOS. Hypothesis: Primary treatment with NE will be associated with a lower mortality
Methods: This CER project will compare management approach at the unit-level allowing inclusion of all eligible patients admitted during the study period. 16 centers in Canada, 2 centers in Ireland, 1 center in each of Israel, Spain and the UK, and 6 centers in the United States have agreed to standardize their practice. All eligible patients deemed circulatory insufficient will receive fluid therapy (minimum 10-20 cc/kg). If hypotension remains unresolved: Dopamine Units: start at 5mics/kg/min, increase every 16-30 minutes by 5 mics/kg/min to a maximum dose of 15 mics/kg/min or adequate response Norepinephrine Units: start at 0.05 mics/kg/min, increase every 16-30 minutes by 0.05 mics/kg/min to maximum dose of 0.15/mics/kg/min or adequate response
• ≤32 weeks gestational age and \> 48 hours of life
• Receiving primary vasopressor therapy with Dopamine or Norepinephrine in the context of suspected late-onset sepsis or necrotizing enterocolitis with systemic hypotension (defined as: culture positive or negative bloodstream infection)