New ECHO Research Characterizes Children Born Preterm into Four Neurobehavioral Profiles Based on a Combination of Health Outcomes

Collaborative ECHO research led by Marie Camerota, PhD of the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University studies the health outcomes of children born preterm and characterizes them into four neurobehavioral profiles. This research, titled “Neurodevelopmental and behavioral outcomes of very preterm infants: latent profile analysis in the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program,” is published in Pediatric Research.

Birth outcomes for infants born very preterm have steadily improved over the past several decades. More children born at earlier gestational ages are surviving into childhood, however, it is unclear how being born very preterm may influence neurodevelopmental or behavioral problems.

Outcomes of children born at a gestational age of less than 33 weeks (“very pre-term”) vary significantly, with some children showing few neurodevelopmental concerns and others showing significant impairment. Most prior research has looked at single outcomes—for example, whether a child born preterm had a lower neurodevelopmental score or higher levels of behavior problems. Understanding how these different outcomes may group together can help researchers and healthcare providers provide more comprehensive treatment plans for children born very preterm.

This study included more than 2,000 babies who were born at less than 33 weeks gestational age from three ECHO Cohort Study Sites. When these children reached the age of two years, researchers conducted a neurodevelopmental assessment and a motor exam on the children while parents completed questionnaires about their children’s behavior. ECHO researchers looked for patterns in these data to understand whether there were groups of children with similar strengths and weaknesses.

Researchers found evidence for four different neurobehavioral profiles based on different combinations of cognitive, motor, and behavioral outcomes of children at the age of two. These profiles range from few or no developmental concerns to severe impairment in one or more domains. The study placed about 85% of children into one of two groups with no/mild developmental delay and a low prevalence of behavioral problems. The remaining 15% fell into one of two profiles with more serious neurodevelopmental problems with (5%) or without (10%) co-occurring behavior problems.

“This study helps us better understand outcomes for children following a very pre-term birth and shows that it is important to measure both neurodevelopmental and behavioral outcomes for children born preterm,” Dr. Camerota said. “The different groups of children we described might require different types of follow-up services or interventions. Therefore, the results of this study could potentially be used to develop personalized interventions for children following a very pre-term birth.”

More research is needed to understand why some preterm children develop neurodevelopmental and/or behavioral problems and others do not. To do this, future studies may study risk factors in pregnancy, the perinatal period, and in early infancy.

Read the research summary.