Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| St. Louis University | OTHER |
| Washington University School of Medicine | OTHER |
| University of North Carolina | OTHER |
| Harvard University |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
The long-term goal of this project is to improve the health and well-being of preterm infants and their parents. Although there is evidence to support positive multisensory interventions in the NICU, these interventions are often applied in an inconsistent manner, reducing their benefit. Through a rigorous and scientific process, we have developed a structured multisensory intervention program, titled Supporting and Enhancing NICU Sensory Experiences (SENSE), which includes specific doses and targeted timing of evidence-based interventions such as massage, auditory exposure, rocking, holding, and skin-to-skin care. The interventions are based on the infant's developmental stage and are adapted based on the infant's medical status and behavioral cues. The multisensory interventions are designed to be conducted during each day of NICU hospitalization by the parents, who are educated and supported to provide them. The proposed work aims to determine the effect of multisensory interventions on parent mental health, parent-child interaction, brain activity (amplitude integrated electroencephalography), and infant developmental outcomes through age 2 years, with specific attention to language outcome.
Two-hundred fifteen parent-infant dyads of preterm infants born ≤ 32 weeks gestation and admitted to a Level IV NICU (and associated Level III NICU) will be enrolled within 1 week of birth. Infants will be randomized to either the SENSE multisensory program or to the standard of care during the NICU stay. The SENSE program combines structured, easy-to-conduct, multisensory interventions with parent engagement to optimize outcomes in the complex medical environment of the NICU. Standardized assessments of parent mental health, infant neurodevelopment, and parent-child interaction will be conducted prior to NICU discharge and at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years, adjusted for prematurity. Differences between groups will be investigated. Brain activity during NICU stay, including in the presence and absence of different sensory exposures, will also be investigated. The expected outcome is that the SENSE multisensory program will have a positive effect on improving outcomes.
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monitored standard of care | Active Comparator | At the study site, much like other contemporary NICUs, parents are encouraged to be present 24 hours per day, with significant variability in the amount, types and timing of parent engagement. Infant holding is supported, provided the infant can maintain physiological stability during handling. Parents can hold infants on mechanical ventilation, but holding is not encouraged during times when the infant is on oscillatory ventilation and/or when chest tubes are in place. Holding time may be restricted in infants <32 weeks due to temperature instability. Nurses and therapists foster parent participation through instruction on caregiving and developmentally appropriate interactions, but these are balanced with other priorities of care. With standard of care, there is no targeted and set amount of positive sensory exposure, and practices vary based on the comfort level of nurses, the medical team, and the parents. |
|
| SENSE multisensory program | Experimental | The SENSE program includes the provision of specific types and amounts of evidence-based tactile, auditory, visual, vestibular/kinesthetic, and olfactory interventions to be conducted by parents with their preterm infants, with a specific amount defined for each day of hospitalization. The program changes across PMA and an infant's tolerance of the prescribed activities. A sensory support team can fill in the gaps in intervention for infants in the SENSE group when parents are not available. The parent education materials identify specific doses of sensory inputs at each PMA. Feasibility has been established, with provision of an average of 155 hours of sensory exposures across NICU hospitalization. |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SENSE multisensory program | Behavioral | In order to support parent's ability to implement the daily SENSE program they will be provided with an educational manual reviewing the program, weekly meetings with a therapist, and logs to report their visitation schedule and activities. Parents are able to choose different types of each sensory exposure. All options address the same key principles for that behavior and only include those that have evidence to support their use and are appropriate at each PMA. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Bayley Scales of Infant Toddler Development, 4th Edition | Standardized assessment of language, cognitive, and motor: language outcome is the primary outcome | 2 years adjusted age |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Bayley Scales of Infant Toddler Development, 4th Edition | Standardized assessment of language, cognitive, and motor | 6 months and 1 year adjusted age (when completed in newborn follow-up clinic) |
| NICU Network Neurobehavioral Assessment Scale |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Home Observation Measurement of the Environment | self report measure of the home environment | At 6 months, one and two years adjusted age |
| Family Resilience Assessment Scale | self report measure of family resilience |
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roberta Pineda, PhD OTR/L | Contact | (323) 442-2850 | bobbi.pineda@chan.usc.edu | |
| Amit Mathur, MD | Contact | 314) 577-5642 | amit.mathur@health.slu.edu |
| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Roberta Pineda, PhD OTR/L | University of Southern California | Principal Investigator |
| Amit Mathur, MD | St. Louis University | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital | Recruiting | St Louis | Missouri | 63104 | United States |
Not provided
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D047928 | Premature Birth |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D007752 | Obstetric Labor, Premature |
| D007744 | Obstetric Labor Complications |
| D011248 | Pregnancy Complications |
| D005261 | Female Urogenital Diseases and Pregnancy Complications |
Not provided
Not provided
| OTHER |
| Hugo W. Moser Research Institute at Kennedy Krieger, Inc. | OTHER |
| St. Louis Children's Hospital | OTHER |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Parents will enroll in this study, understanding that they will be assigned to one of two types of sensory approaches. They will be masked from whether they are in the treatment (SENSE group) or control group (standard of care). After enrollment, the SENSE program will be described to those parents assigned to the SENSE group. The use of nurses and therapists to aid the parent in conducting sensory interventions at the bedside will be described to those parents assigned to the standard of care group. All assessments in the NICU will be conducted at the infant's bedside by a certified (when necessary) and trained evaluator who is blinded to treatment assignment. All assessments following NICU discharge will be conducted by a different blinded evaluator (to decrease bias), who is trained and experienced with standardized childhood assessment. The evaluators will not be involved in other study-related activities in order to maintain blinding.
|
| Monitored standard of care | Behavioral | Infants who receive sensory exposures only as standard of care but do not recieve the SENSE program |
|
Standardized neonatal neurobehavioral assessment
| Between 35-41 weeks PMA |
| Sensory Profile 2 | Parent-report measure of sensory processing | Prior to NICU discharge and at 6 months, 1 and 2 years adjusted age, |
| Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers | Parent report measure of sensory features | 2 years adjusted age |
| Ages and Stages Questionnaire-3 | parent report measure of development | 6 months adjusted age, 1 and 2 years adjusted age |
| Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) | Parent report measure of social emotional function | 2 years adjusted |
| Emotional Availability Scales | Standardized observational assessment of parent-child interaction | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) and at 2 years adjusted |
| State Trait Anxiety Inventory | Self report measure of anxiety | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) and at 6 months, one and 2 years adjusted age |
| Life Stress Subscale of the Parenting Stress Index (PSI) | Self report measure of stress | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) and at 6 months, one and 2 years adjusted age |
| Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) | Self report measure of maternal postpartum depression | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) |
| aEEG Burdjalov Score | The Olympic Brainz Monitor (OBM) Monitor (TMNatus), which provides continuous cerebral function monitoring, will be used for aEEG recordings at four time points. After a minimum baseline aEEG tracing of 4 hours, a sensory intervention (that has no movement artifact) will be performed for one hour, followed by monitoring for one additional hour after the sensory intervention is removed. This will be a total monitoring time of 6 hours. We will record who performed the intervention (parent, volunteer, research member) and the type of intervention (ie. holding, kangaroo, reading). Scores will also be evaluated as an outcome measure across PMA | within two weeks of birth, at 30 and 34 weeks PMA, and between 35-41 weeks PMA for six continuous hours |
| At 6 months, one and two years adjusted age |
| Experiences and Satisfaction During Preterm Birth | self report measure of parent experience in NICU | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) |
| Parent Stress Scale | self report measure of parent stress | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) |
| Parent Stress Scale: NICU | Self report measure of parent stress related to NICU hospitalization | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) |
| Maternal Confidence Questionnaire | Self report measure of parental confidence related to care of infant | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) |
| Infant Care Questionnaire | Self report measure of parental confidence related to care of infant | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) |
| Parent Stress Inventory | Self report measure of parent stress | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA), 6 months adjusted age |
| Parenting Sense of Competence | Self report measure of parent feelings of competence related to care of infant | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA), 6 months adjusted age, 1 year adjusted age, 2 years adjusted age |
| Neonatal Eating Outcome Assessment Tool | Assessment of infant feeding skills | Prior to the infant's discharge from the NICU (35-41 weeks PMA) |
| Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Questionnaire | Assessment of parental PTSD | 6 months adjusted age, 1 year adjusted age |
| Sleep and Settle Questionnaire | Assessment of infant sleep patterns | 6 months adjusted age, 1 year adjusted age |
| General Anxiety Disorder 7 Scale | Assessment of parental anxiety | 6 months adjusted age |
| Beck Depression Inventory II | Assessment of parental depression | 6 months adjusted age, 1 year adjusted age, 2 years adjusted age |
| Pediatric Eating Assessment Tool | Assessment of child feeding skills | 1 year adjusted age, 2 years adjusted age |
| Behavioral Pediatric Feeding Assessment Scale | Assessment of child feeding behaviors | 1 year adjusted age, 2 years adjusted age |
| NEO-Eat | Parent report measure of feeding during infancy | 6 months adjusted age |
| D000091642 | Urogenital Diseases |