Delivering Hope: Anti-inflammatory Drug Trial For Preterm Babies
When baby Blessing arrived very early, her parents joined a drug trial they hope will go on to benefit all preterm babies.
Blessing was born very
early and in a hurry at 25 weeks, but she’s a
battler.
Her parents immediately enrolled her in a
drug trial, so, in the future, other preterm babies can beat
the odds, too.
The trial is a pilot study of a drug,
called ‘anakinra’, already used for inflammatory
diseases in older children and adults, which neonatal
doctors hope could help very early babies, too.
Blessing
was mother Virginia Vavau’s first preterm birth, with
three older siblings all born at full term.
“I
wanted to take part to help other preterm babies – and
Blessing,” Mrs Vavau says.
Baby Blessing needed
to stay in an incubator in the neonatal unit at Te Whatu Ora
Starship Children’s Hospital at Te Toka Tumai Auckland,
where neonatologist Dr Gergely Toldi, was one of the team
caring for her.
Dr Toldi is also a researcher at Waipapa
Taumata Rau, University of Auckland’s Liggins Institute.
He is leading the Aotearoa New Zealand arm of the anakinra
pilot trial in collaboration with colleagues at Monash
University’s School of Clinical Sciences and Hudson
Institute of Medical Research in Melbourne, Australia.
Dr
Toldi hopes anakinra will help preterm babies for whom
inflammation can be very dangerous.
“Inflammation
can lead to lung disease resulting in babies needing
breathing support and additional oxygen for long periods of
time, even beyond discharge from the neonatal unit,” he
says.
“It can also cause bowel problems, which may
necessitate surgery, as well as brain injury, leading to
long-term developmental problems, and potentially resulting
in disability.”
In the trial, anakinra is used daily
for the first three weeks of the preterm babies’
lives.
“This novel therapeutic approach may be a
game-changer in our clinical management of preterm
babies,” says Dr Toldi.
“Reducing the burden of
complications arising from prematurity is a number one
healthcare and socioeconomic priority, and this treatment
will hopefully do just that.”
Professors Marcel and
Claudia Nold, a husband-and-wife team, lead the team of
researchers across Monash University, Hudson Institute and
Monash Children’s Hospital.
The Anakinra pilot study
builds on a programme of research on early life inflammation
they have conducted since 2009. The pair published an
important part of their work this year in the journal,
Science Translational Medicine, which identified a
particular type of inflammation which drives lung and heart
disease in preterm babies.
“This new knowledge allows
us to work on ways to control inflammation in preterm babies
and prevent lifelong health problems,” Dr Marcel Nold
says.
Results from New Zealand whānau will be pooled
with those from Australia and analysed in
Australia.
After the pilot study, a much larger
multi-centre trial is planned, which will test the theory
that anakinra effectively ameliorates or even prevents
diseases caused by inflammation in preterm
babies.