Researchers from McMaster University have evaluated and determined that LISA, or Less Invasive Surfactant Administration (on Continuous Positive Airway Pressure) is the best ventilation strategy to prevent chronic lung disease, one of the most significant complications in preterm infants.
LISA is a non-invasive ventilation strategy in which infants are given surfactant — a substance that keeps the tiny air sacs in the lung open — through a soft, thin tube placed in the windpipe while a breathing mask over the baby’s nose supports respiration. The advantage of LISA is that it can maintain pressure to the baby’s lungs to keep them open while surfactant is being given, while avoiding the use of a breathing tube and too much pressure.
The study, published today in the Journal of American Medical Association, compared seven different ventilation strategies. Based on data collected from 30 different trials and over 5,500 infants younger than 33 weeks’ gestational age, the lead author of the study, Dr. Tetsuya Isayama, said one strategy appeared more effective than most.
Using and promoting this strategy will have major global ramifications, he said.
“These preterm infants have a high risk of death or severe complications, many of which come from the fact that their lungs have not yet fully developed,” said Isayama, a PhD candidate in McMaster’s Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine. “Although a number of factors contribute to long-term breathing problems, or chronic lung disease, one of the major factors is lung injury from too much pressure and expansion from the breathing machine with a large breathing tube in the windpipe. Therefore, it is important to select as gentle breathing assistance as possible for preterm infants – but until this study, the best method was not known.”
The study found that LISA, on average, resulted in 164 fewer preterm babies per 1000 dying or having long term breathing problems compared to those when a large breathing tube was inserted into a windpipe and a breathing machine was used.
The originator of the study, Dr. Sarah McDonald, said that these are very promising results.
“The next step is to determine which infants require surfactant and which do not,” McDonald said. “We also need to determine which babies with gentler breathing assistance get tired and need more breathing support, and need to eventually be placed on a breathing machine.”