Association of nucleated red blood cell count with mortality among neonatal intensive care unit patients.

Morton, S. U., Brettin, K., Feldman, H. A., & Leeman, K. T. (2020). Association of nucleated red blood cell count with mortality among neonatal intensive care unit patients.. Pediatrics and Neonatology, 61(6), 592-597.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nucleated red blood cells (nRBCs) are associated with adverse outcomes for pediatric and adult intensive care patients.

METHODS: The association between nRBC count and mortality was examined in an observational cohort of patients admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit from December 2015-December 2018.

RESULTS: Among the 1059 patients with at least one nRBC count obtained, 45 infants (4.2%) experienced in-hospital mortality prior to NICU discharge, the primary outcome measured in this study. Infants with any nRBC count >0 had a significantly higher risk of mortality (5.3% [45/849] vs. 0% [0/351], p < 0.001 by Fisher exact), and time to mortality decreased with higher nRBC counts (Spearman correlation -0.59, p < 0.001). The association between nRBC count and mortality remained significant even when restricting only to infants who were older than 7 days at time of nRBC count.

CONCLUSION: Among neonatal intensive care unit patients, including those >7 days old, nRBCs are associated with significantly elevated mortality risk. A prospective study to better characterize clinical co-variants is necessary to better establish the use of nRBCs as a predictor of mortality.

Last updated on 02/18/2025
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