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. 2015 Oct 7;3:225. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2015.00225

Table 8.

Mortality rates of patients from developed countries.

Author Country Year(s) Methods Age of infants Mortality outcome Reasons for death
Feng et al. (20) Australia 1995–2006 Data for 24,131 infants admitted to 10 NICUs GA <24 weeks (n = 145)
GA ≥37 weeks (n = 6,239)
Median age at death: 4 days
Overall mortality rate: 9.2% (2,224/24,131)
Mortality rate between 1995 and 2000: 10.3% (1,152/11,185)
Mortality rate between 2001 and 2006: 8.3% (1,072/12,946)
Overall leading causes of death: congenital abnormalities (n = >445, >20%), respiratory failure (n ≈ 400, ~ 18%), HIE (n ≈ 222, ~ 10%), infection (n ≈ 222, ~ 10%)
Most common causes of death in term infants: congenital abnormalities (40%), HIE (28%)
Most common causes of death in preterm infants: respiratory failure (20%)
1995–2000: congenital problems (n = 252, 21.9%), respiratory failure (n = 217, 18.8%), infection (n = 136, 11.8%), HIE (n = 128, 11.1%), IVH (n = 80, 6.9%), cardiovascular failure (n = 56, 4.9%), NEC (n = 47, 4.1%), chronic lung disease (n = 25, 2.2%), renal failure (n = 19, 1.6%), SIDS (n = 13, 1.1%), hematological disorders (n = 8, 0.7%), neoplasm (n = 6, 0.5%), trauma (n = 4, 0.3%), maternal conditions (n = 3, 0.3%)
2001–2006: congenital problems (n = 226, 21.1%), respiratory failure (n = 188, 17.5%), HIE (n = 129, 12.0%), infection (n = 116, 10.8%), IVH (n = 112, 10.4%), extreme prematurity (n = 76, 7.1%), NEC (n = 58, 5.4%), cardiovascular failure (n = 36, 3.4%), chronic lung disease (n = 21, 2.0%), renal failure (n = 20, 1.9%), SIDS (n = 14, 1.3%), neoplasm (n = 8, 0.7%), maternal conditions (n = 6, 0.6%), trauma (n = 5, 0.5%), hematological disorders (n = 4, 0.4%)
Keir et al. (21) Australia 2005–2010 Data for 36 extremely low birth weight infants (≤500 g), including 26 NICU patients, born at a tertiary hospital GA of ≥22 weeks
Mean GA of the 12 deceased infants: 24.4 ± 1.4 weeks
Median age at death: 20 days
46% (12/26) NEC (n = 2, 17%), fulminating NEC (n = 2, 17%), recurrent NEC/multiple cardiorespiratory arrests (n = 1, 8%), progressive lactic acidosis – unresponsive to treatment (n = 1, 8%), severe lung disease (n = 1, 8%), respiratory failure/sepsis (n = 1, 8%), massive liver necrosis and fibrosis – etiology unclear (n = 1, 8%), severe irrecoverable chronic lung disease (n = 1, 8%), lower limb gangrene/cardiorespiratory arrest (n = 1, 8%), bilateral grade IV IVH (n = 1, 8%)
Sankaran et al. (22) Canada January 8, 1996–October 31, 1997 Data for 19,265 infants admitted to 17 tertiary-level NICUs Age at death: 2 (n = 318, 40%), 3 (n = 397, 50%), 12 (n = 596, 75%) days since NICU admission; 1 month after admission (n = 79, 10%) Overall mortality rate: 4% (795/19,265)
Mortality rate for infants with birth weight <500 g: 51%
Mortality rate for infants with birth weight ≤1,500 g: 2%
Outborn status (n = 334, 42%), GA < 24 weeks (n = 310, 39%), chromosomal or congenital anomalies (n = 270, 34%), HIE (n = 127, 16%), infection (n = 111, 14%), GA 24–28 weeks (n = 103, 13%), small for GA (n = 79, 10%)
Simpson et al. (23) Canada 1997, 2002, 2007 Data for 156 in-hospital deaths (53 in 1997, 50 in 2002, 53 in 2007) at a tertiary-level NICU 2007: GA of 23–27 (n = 104, 14.3%), 28–32 (n = 113, 15.5%), 33–35 (n = 102, 14.0%), ≥36 (n = 407, 55.9%) weeks
Median age at death: 16 days (range: 1–180 days)
Average annual mortality rate between 1988 and 2007: 7.6% 2007: gastrointestinal (n = 15, 28.3%), neurologic (n = 14, 26.4%), cardiorespiratory disorders (n = 10, 18.9%), congenital abnormality (n = 8, 15.1%), infection (n = 4, 7.5%), extreme prematurity (n = 2, 3.8%)
Manktelow et al. (25) England 2008–2010 Data for 2,995 white singleton infants admitted to NICUs in the East Midlands and Yorkshire regions of England GA of 23 (n = 18)–32 weeks (n = 1,329) 8.1% (244/2,995) Not listed
Corchia et al. (29) Italy 2005 Data for 4,014 very preterm infants admitted to 105 tertiary-level NICUs GA of ≤ 23 (n = 167, 4.2%), 24 (n = 185, 4.6%), 25 (n = 226, 5.6%), 26 (n = 285, 7.1%), 27 (n = 365, 9.1%), 28 (n = 451, 11.2%), 29 (n = 560, 14.0%), 30 (n = 725, 18.1%), 31 (n = 1,048, 26.1%) weeks 18.8% (755/4,014) Not listed
Battin et al. (32) New Zealand 1959–2009 Data for very low birth weight (≤1,500 g) infants born at a single tertiary neonatal unit Not listed Mortality rate of infants with birth weight of 501–1,000 g in 2009: 30%
Mortality rate of infants with birth weight of 1,001– 1,500 g in 2009: 5%
2008: prematurity and early cardiorespiratory problems (predominantly RDS) (33%), infection (29%), congenital anomalies (12%), NEC (12%)
Costa et al. (34) Portugal 2004–2008 Data for 1,938 infants admitted to a NICU Median GA: 34 weeks
Median age at death: 10.5 days (range: 0–317 days)
5.7% (110/1,938) Congenital malformations, including cardiac anomalies (n = 55, 50%), prematurity with its complications (n = 37, 33.6%), infection (n = 5, 4.5%), and HIE (n = 3, 2.7%)
Alleman et al. (38) United States of America 2006–2009 Data for 5,418 extremely low birth weight (401–1,000 g) infants born at 16 Neonatal Research Network centers GA of 22–28 weeks Median mortality of all infants in the 16 centers: 34% (~1,842/5,418) (range: 11–53%)Median mortality of infants <25 weeks GA in the 16 centers: 63% (range: 28–90%)
Median mortality of infants ≥25 weeks GA in the 16 centers: 16% (range: 7–26%)
Not listed
Lake et al. (39) United States of America 2007–2008 Data for 72,235 very low birth weight (501–1,500 g) infants born at 558 Vermont Oxford Network hospital NICUs Mean GA: 28.2 weeks (n = 72,235) 12.9% (9,278/71,936) Not listed

g, grams; GA, gestational age; HIE, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy; IVH, intraventricular hemorrhage; n, number; NEC, necrotizing enterocolitis; NICU, neonatal intensive care unit; RDS, respiratory distress syndrome; SIDS, sudden infant death syndrome.