4.7 Article

Brain mass estimation by head circumference and body mass methods in neonatal glycaemic modelling and control

Journal

COMPUTER METHODS AND PROGRAMS IN BIOMEDICINE
Volume 115, Issue 2, Pages 47-54

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2014.03.006

Keywords

Central nervous system; Brain mass; Preterm infants; Glycaemic control; Insulin therapy; Physiological modelling

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Introduction: Hyperglycaemia is a common complication of stress and prematurity in extremely low-birth-weight infants. Model-based insulin therapy protocols have the ability to safely improve glycaemic control for this group. Estimating non-insulin-mediated brain glucose uptake by the central nervous system in these models is typically done using population-based body weight models, which may not be ideal. Method: A head circumference-based model that separately treats small-for-gestational-age( SGA) and appropriate-for-gestational-age (AGA) infants is compared to a body weight modelin a retrospective analysis of 48 patients with a median birth weight of 750 g and median gestational age of 25 weeks. Estimated brain mass, model-based insulin sensitivity (S-I) profiles, and projected glycaemic control outcomes are investigated. SGA infants (5) are also analyzed as a separate cohort. Results: Across the entire cohort, estimated brain mass deviated by a median 10% between models, with a per-patient median difference in S-I of 3.5%. For the SGA group, brain mass deviation was 42%, and per-patient S-I deviation 13.7%. In virtual trials, 87-93% of recommended insulin rates were equal or slightly reduced (Delta < 0.16 mU/h) under the head circumference method, while glycaemic control outcomes showed little change. Conclusion: The results suggest that body weight methods are not as accurate as head circumference methods. Head circumference-based estimates may offer improved modelling accuracy and a small reduction in insulin administration, particularly for SGA infants. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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