Purpose: The SafeBoosC-III trial compared treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring for the first 72 h after birth with usual care in 1601 extremely preterm infants. Incidence of death or severe brain injury at 36 weeks of postmenstrual age did not differ between the cerebral oximetry and usual care group (relative risk with cerebral oximetry, 1.03; 95% CI 0.90 to 1.18). To assess the probability of clinically important benefit or harm, we conducted secondary analyses in a Bayesian framework. Methods: Primary analyses used a weakly informative prior assuming a wide range of effects, to assess the probability that treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring carried an a priori defined clinically important benefit or harm (a relative risk below 0.90 or above 1.10) or any benefit or harm (a relative risk differing from 1.0) for death or severe brain injury. Secondary analyses used an evidence-based prior derived from relevant prior trials. Results: Posterior probabilities of clinically important benefit or harm were 1.5% and 19.2%, respectively. Posterior probabilities of any benefit or harm were 28.7% and 71.3%, respectively. Probabilities derived from secondary analyses using evidence-based priors were consistent with those from the primary analysis. Conclusion: Treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring during the first 72 h after birth in extremely preterm infants resulted in posterior probabilities of 1.5% for a clinically important benefit and 19.2% for a clinically important harm with respect to the incidence of death or severe brain injury at 36 weeks of postmenstrual age. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03770741. Registered on 12 July 2018.

Treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring in extremely preterm infants: a Bayesian analysis of the SafeBoosC-III randomised clinical trial / M.L. Hansen, M.H. Olsen, T. Lange, C. Gluud, T. Haugegaard, R. Christensen, L. Thabane, G. Greisen, J.C. Jakobsen, N. Null, A. Pellicer, A. El-Kuffash, A. Bargiel, A. Alarcon, A. Hopper, A. Truttmann, A. Hergenhan, A. Klamer, A. Curley, A.M. Heuchan, A. Smits, A.C. Memisoglu, B. Krolak-Olejnik, B. Rzepecka, B.L. Gonzales, B. Yasa, B. Urlesberger, C. Morales-Betancourt, C. Lecart, C. Knöepfli, C. Hagmann, D. Healy, E. Ergenekon, E. Hatzidaki, E. Bergon-Sendin, E. Skylogianni, E. Rafinska-Wazny, E. Mastretta, E. Dempsey, E. Valverde, E. Papathoma, F. Mosca, G. Dimitriou, G. Pichler, G. Vento, G.H. Hahn, G. Naulaers, G. Cheng, H. Fuchs, H. Ozkan, I. De Las Cuevas, I. Serrano-Vinuales, I. Sadowska-Krawczenko, J. Kucera, J. Tkaczyk, J. Miletin, J. Sirc, J. Baumgartner, J. Mintzer, J. De Buyst, K. Mccall, K. Tsoni, K. Sarafidis, L. Bender, L.S. Lopez, L. Wang, L. Thewissen, L. Huijia, L. Chalak, L. Yang, L. Cornette, L. Arruza, M. Wilinska, M. Baserga, M.I.S. Rasmussen, M.M. Ybarra, M.T. Palacio, M. Stocker, M. Agosti, M. Cetinkaya, M. Alsina, M. Fumagalli, M.M. Kadri, M.S. Akin, M. Baş, N. Koksal, O.O. Vaccarello, O. Baud, P. Zafra, P. Agergaard, P. Korcek, P. Maton, R. Sanchez-Salmador, R. Del Rio Florentino, R. Lauterbach, S.P. Borregas, S. Nesargi, S.S. Oguz, S.A. Rao, S. Zeng, S. Pisoni, S. Hyttel-Sørensen, S.G. Kersin, S. Fredly, S. Marciniak, T. Karen, T. Szczapa, T. Nordvik, V. Karadyova, X. Gao, X. Xu, Z. Vesoulis, Z. Peng, Z. Yin. - In: TRIALS. - ISSN 1745-6215. - (2026). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1186/s13063-026-09742-z]

Treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring in extremely preterm infants: a Bayesian analysis of the SafeBoosC-III randomised clinical trial

M. Fumagalli;
2026

Abstract

Purpose: The SafeBoosC-III trial compared treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring for the first 72 h after birth with usual care in 1601 extremely preterm infants. Incidence of death or severe brain injury at 36 weeks of postmenstrual age did not differ between the cerebral oximetry and usual care group (relative risk with cerebral oximetry, 1.03; 95% CI 0.90 to 1.18). To assess the probability of clinically important benefit or harm, we conducted secondary analyses in a Bayesian framework. Methods: Primary analyses used a weakly informative prior assuming a wide range of effects, to assess the probability that treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring carried an a priori defined clinically important benefit or harm (a relative risk below 0.90 or above 1.10) or any benefit or harm (a relative risk differing from 1.0) for death or severe brain injury. Secondary analyses used an evidence-based prior derived from relevant prior trials. Results: Posterior probabilities of clinically important benefit or harm were 1.5% and 19.2%, respectively. Posterior probabilities of any benefit or harm were 28.7% and 71.3%, respectively. Probabilities derived from secondary analyses using evidence-based priors were consistent with those from the primary analysis. Conclusion: Treatment guided by cerebral oximetry monitoring during the first 72 h after birth in extremely preterm infants resulted in posterior probabilities of 1.5% for a clinically important benefit and 19.2% for a clinically important harm with respect to the incidence of death or severe brain injury at 36 weeks of postmenstrual age. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03770741. Registered on 12 July 2018.
Bayesian analysis; Cerebral oximetry; Extremely preterm; Near-infrared spectroscopy; Neonatal intensive care; Randomised clinical trial
Settore MEDS-20/A - Pediatria generale e specialistica
2026
29-apr-2026
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
s13063-026-09742-z_reference.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Post-print, accepted manuscript ecc. (versione accettata dall'editore)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 923.86 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
923.86 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1241311
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 1
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
  • OpenAlex 0
social impact