Vitamin A to prevent bronchopulmonary dysplasia in very-low-birth-weight infants: has the dose been too low? The NICHD Neonatal Research Network

Publication Description

Inconsistent effects of vitamin A supplementation on prevention of bronchopulmonary dysplasia have been reported. Meta-analysis of these reports resulted in a relative risk of 0.69-1.02 for death or bronchopulmonary dysplasia associated with vitamin A supplementation. Effective dosage regimens or serum retinol concentrations have not been determined in previous reports. The purpose of this pilot study was to define a vitamin A regimen that produces serum retinol concentrations of 25-55 micrograms/dl. In this three-phase study, 91 infants (mean birth weight 799-864 g) were enrolled. Vitamin A was administered three times/week for 4 weeks at an average daily dose of 986-2143 IU/day. Physical examinations were performed and serum retinol specimens were collected weekly to assess clinical signs of toxicity. The majority of serum retinol concentrations remained < 25 micrograms/dl until an intramuscular vitamin A dose of 5000 IU/dose three times/week was used. No clinical signs of toxicity were associated with the higher dosage and higher serum concentrations of vitamin A. A large clinical trial of vitamin A supplementation with 5000 IU/dose three times/week (25-114% more than the dose used in the three published clinical trials) is needed to assess whether vitamin A supplementation safely reduces the risk of bronchopulmonary dysplasia in very-low-birth-weight infants.

Primary Author
Kennedy,K. A.
Stoll,B. J.
Ehrenkranz,R. A.
Oh,W.
Wright,L. L.
Stevenson,D. K.
Lemons,J. A.
Sowell,A.
Mele,L.
Tyson,J. E.
Verter,J.

Volume
49

Issue
1

Start Page
19

Other Pages
31

URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9179535

PMID
9179535



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Early human development

Publication Year
1997

Publication Date
Jul 24,

Place of Publication
Ireland

ISSN/ISBN
0378-3782

Document Object Index
10.1016/s0378-3782(97)01869-0