Abstract
In the absence of effective interventions to prevent preterm births, improved survival of infants who are born at the biological limits of viability has relied on advances in perinatal care over the past 50 years. Except for extremely preterm infants with suboptimal perinatal care or major antenatal events that cause severe respiratory failure at birth, most extremely preterm infants now survive, but they often develop chronic lung dysfunction termed bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD; also known as chronic lung disease). Despite major efforts to minimize injurious but often life-saving postnatal interventions (such as oxygen, mechanical ventilation and corticosteroids), BPD remains the most frequent complication of extreme preterm birth. BPD is now recognized as the result of an aberrant reparative response to both antenatal injury and repetitive postnatal injury to the developing lungs. Consequently, lung development is markedly impaired, which leads to persistent airway and pulmonary vascular disease that can affect adult lung function. Greater insights into the pathobiology of BPD will provide a better understanding of disease mechanisms and lung repair and regeneration, which will enable the discovery of novel therapeutic targets. In parallel, clinical and translational studies that improve the classification of disease phenotypes and enable early identification of at-risk preterm infants should improve trial design and individualized care to enhance outcomes in preterm infants.
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Introduction
In 1967, Northway, Rosen and Porter described a new lung disease in preterm infants who had hyaline membrane disease (now known as respiratory distress syndrome (RDS; see Box 1 for a description of neonatal terms), which at that time was a highly lethal condition that resulted from using mechanical ventilation without positive end-expiratory pressure and high levels of supplemental oxygen in an attempt to save these infants1. In that era, survival was rare despite a relatively mild degree of prematurity (mean gestational age, 34 weeks), but many preterm infants had a slow and prolonged recovery from airway and lung parenchymal injury. The authors termed this new syndrome bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD; also known as chronic lung disease) on the basis of airway histopathological features.
The characteristics of BPD have evolved over the past 50 years, as most preterm infants now survive with the use of antenatal corticosteroids, advanced neonatal care techniques, effective respiratory support devices and surfactant treatments2. A current perspective regarding the initiation, progression and variable extent of lung repair of the most extremely preterm infants who are at highest risk of BPD3 is shown in Fig. 1. In the framework of the Developmental Origins of Adult Diseases concept, transgenerational and pre-conception factors interact with pregnancy exposures to modulate the risk of BPD, and gestational age at birth is the greatest single predictor of BPD. It is essential to recognize that no infant born very preterm is ‘normal’, because of many factors, including abnormalities of pregnancy that result in preterm birth, and the fact that health problems in a preterm newborn are more severe the earlier the birth4. The remarkable plasticity of the lung development programme to support very early gestational lung maturation is crucial for the survival of extremely-low-birth-weight (ELBW; <1,000 g) infants. However, the structurally very immature lungs of these infants are easily injured by the routine care required to ensure their survival. Remarkably, lung development can proceed after preterm birth despite ongoing lung injury from supplemental oxygen and mechanical ventilation and/or lung stretch. BPD is the clinical expression of this mixture of lung developmental plasticity, injury and repair that ultimately results in a remarkable ability of the lungs of surviving infants to remodel until perhaps 20 years of age5.
In this Primer, we discuss the different definitions of BPD, ongoing controversy about the optimal time point and method for determining whether BPD exists, and how this variability might affect assessment of disease prevalence. Furthermore, we review advances in neonatal care, such as non-invasive ventilation and alternative strategies for surfactant administration, which are improving outcomes in preterm infants with BPD. Last, we examine various key issues that require further research to improve our understanding of disease pathobiology and enable development of better interventions that may enhance short-term and long-term outcomes.
Epidemiology
Prevalence
Premature birth (<37 weeks gestational age) is common and affects 6–14% of pregnancies, depending on the country6,7. Generally, premature infants are classified on the basis of gestational age (extremely preterm infants or extremely low gestational age newborns (ELGANs) are <28 weeks gestation; very preterm infants are 28 to <32 weeks gestation, moderate preterm infants are 32 to <34 weeks, and late preterm infants are 34 to <37 weeks) or birth weight (ELBW infants are <1,000 g, very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) infants are <1,500 g, and low-birth-weight (LBW) infants are <2,500 g). BPD incidence increases as gestational age and weight at birth decreases. BPD remains the most common complication associated with prematurity and is increasing in prevalence, most likely due to the increased survival of ELGANs8,9. Almost 50,000 ELGANs are born each year in the USA, and ~35% (18,000) of these children develop BPD. The incidence of BPD varies widely between centres (~20–75%), even after adjusting for potential risk factors10. Data from major cohort studies (such as ELGAN, Canadian Neonatal Network, Korean Neonatal Network, Vermont–Oxford Network and Swiss Neonatal Network, as well as studies in China, Taiwan and India) demonstrate a BPD prevalence of 11–50%, a wide range that is due to differences in gestational age or birth weight criteria for a BPD diagnosis11,12,13,14,15,16,17.
Marked variations in neonatal outcomes between countries have been identified in a large, multicentre, multinational cohort of 58,004 very preterm and VLBW infants from Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Israel, Japan, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK18. For example, Japan had the lowest mortality but the highest rate of treatment for retinopathy of prematurity, whereas Spain had the highest mortality but a comparatively lower prevalence of BPD. These variations could be the result of differences in population coverage, organization of perinatal health-care delivery, population characteristics, case definitions, ascertainment, data quality and reliability, and care processes, and highlight the need for international multicentre clinical trials and international benchmarking and quality improvement activities.
Risk factors
The strongest risk factors for BPD are prematurity and low birth weight19,20,21,22,23,24,25. Almost 80% of infants who are born at 22–24 weeks of gestation are diagnosed with BPD26, whereas only 20% of infants born at 28 weeks of gestation develop BPD. Among infants with BPD, 95% are VLBW27. Other perinatal risk factors include intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR)13, male sex13,20,23 and, inconsistently, chorioamnionitis28, race or ethnicity13,20,23, and smoking29,30. Genetic risk factors may also contribute to the development of BPD, as indicated by twin studies31,32, and there is an ongoing search for genetic markers for BPD33,34,35,36,37.
Early respiratory patterns of premature infants provide insight into risk factors for BPD. An early study suggested that peak inspiratory ventilator pressure and requirement for assisted ventilation on day 4 of life are early predictors of BPD38. Subsequent studies found that three patterns of lung disease generally emerge in the first 2 weeks of life39,40,41,42,43,44,45 (Fig. 2). In the first pattern, infants have fairly minimal lung disease and progressively recover. In the second pattern, early persistent pulmonary deterioration (EPPD), substantial and prolonged respiratory support is required from birth. In the third pattern, an initial improvement in lung disease in the first week of life is followed by a respiratory decompensation termed pulmonary deterioration, which often requires mechanical ventilation and an increase in supplemental oxygen. Risk factors that may be associated with pulmonary deterioration include late surfactant deficiency46, sepsis, increased levels of inflammatory proteins (such as RANTES)47 and patent ductus arteriosus40,43. Almost 50% of infants with pulmonary deterioration and almost 70% of infants with EPPD develop BPD48.
The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Neonatal Research Network developed an online, publicly available risk estimator (https://neonatal.rti.org/index.cfm) that accurately estimates the risk of developing BPD by postnatal day49. Investigators identified risk factors for BPD, and the competing outcome of death, among gestational age, birth weight, ethnicity and sex, ventilatory support (ranging from no support (breathing room air without positive airway pressure) to high frequency ventilation) and fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2), on postnatal days 1, 3, 7, 14, 21 and 28 in 3,636 infants born at 23–30 weeks of gestation. The BPD prediction tool is internally and externally validated. The models predict the correct level of BPD or the occurrence of death in >80% of cases and have the highest area under the curve (AUC) among current BPD risk predictors50. This tool is used to provide counselling to families and to quantify risk for determining patient inclusion in early phase therapeutic trials. Interestingly, systemic inflammation occurs early in the neonatal period and precedes clinical symptoms in infants with BPD51. This finding suggests that a therapeutic window of opportunity exists during the early phase of BPD.
Mechanisms/pathophysiology
Lung development and surfactant
Normal lung development
Respiration after birth is entirely dependent on the architecture of the peripheral lung saccules and alveoli. The close interface between alveolar epithelial cells and endothelial cells of the pulmonary microvasculature enables efficient exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide (Fig. 3). Lung formation begins between week 3 and week 6 of gestation. Subsets of endodermal cells from the anterior foregut form the initial tracheal and pulmonary lung buds that invade the splanchnic mesenchyme. Branching morphogenesis52 forms the conducting airways and peripheral acinar buds that will ultimately form the alveoli after birth (Fig. 4). Complex paracrine interactions among various mesenchymal cells, including pericytes, smooth muscle cells, endothelial cells and various types of fibroblasts, and respiratory epithelial cells and endothelial progenitor cells are involved in the formation of the pulmonary parenchyma53,54,55. Acinar structures dilate later in gestation, creating the peripheral saccules (the primitive gas exchange portion of the lung) and alveoli that will accommodate postnatal adaptation to breathing. During morphogenesis, the lung is transformed from a solid gland-like tissue to an expanded open alveolar structure in which gas exchange can occur (Fig. 5). During the last trimester (28–40 weeks of gestation), peripheral saccules undergo a process of septation that further divides the airspaces, creating and increasing the number of alveoli and thereby increasing the surface area for gas exchange. Peripheral lung epithelial cells mature into alveolar type 1 (AT1) cells and AT2 cells, the latter producing pulmonary surfactant (Fig. 3). Thus, preterm infants at the edge of viability (22–23 weeks of gestation) begin ventilation at the canalicular–saccular stage of lung formation, well before morphogenesis and alveolar differentiation are completed.
Pulmonary surfactant
Pulmonary surfactant is a complex mixture of phospholipids, primarily phosphatidylcholine, and the surfactant proteins SP-A, SP-B, SP-C and SP-D, which together define the physical structure, function and metabolism of surfactant in the alveolus (Fig. 3). Synthesis of surfactant lipids and proteins depends on the differentiation of AT2 cells, which occurs fairly late in gestation. Consequently, a lack of pulmonary surfactant as a result of incomplete differentiation of AT2 cells causes RDS in preterm infants56. Assisted ventilation, continuous airway pressure and supplemental oxygen can initially support ventilation after birth. Furthermore, administration of exogenous pulmonary surfactant has greatly facilitated the transition to air breathing, decreasing the requirement for oxygen and assisted ventilation and thereby improving survival but secondarily increasing the number of infants at risk of BPD.
In conclusion, postnatal adaptation of the preterm lungs to breathing at birth is challenged by initial lung injury owing to surfactant deficiency, exposure to increased oxygen, mechanical ventilation, inadequate nutrition, infection and inflammation, which together provide considerable hurdles to normal pulmonary growth and repair and result in a loss of alveolar surface area (Fig. 5) that has lifelong consequences.
Pathophysiology of acute lung injury
BPD is a clinical syndrome of lung injury that disrupts alveolarization and microvascular development. The anatomical changes in BPD result in abnormal gas exchange and lung mechanics. However, of note, the pathological features of BPD are based on only a few reports that primarily describe necropsy specimens57. In fact, most patients with BPD survive, and imaging studies reveal that they probably have a very heterogeneous pathology throughout the lungs, including regions of decreased alveolarization, cystic emphysema, fibrosis and variable airway injury58. This complex injury results primarily from damage to the very preterm lungs by multiple antenatal and postnatal exposures, each of which may disrupt specific developmental pathways and promote injury (Fig. 1).
An extensive review of publications over an 18 month period (January 2015 to June 2017) identified 60 genes in transgenic mouse models that result in altered mouse lung development with characteristics of BPD59. Inflammation is the common pathway that leads to a BPD phenotype. Supplemental oxygen, positive pressure ventilation and postnatal sepsis, which all cause lung inflammation, are clinically associated with BPD. In animal models, supplemental oxygen alone or positive pressure ventilation alone cause a BPD phenotype (that is, decreased alveolarization and microvascular injury)60. The most frequently used animal models are term mice or rats that are exposed to supplemental oxygen or preterm sheep or primates that are injured by excessive oxygen and/or ventilation or stretch61. Numerous studies have shown that blockers of inflammatory mediators, receptors and signalling pathways improve the BPD phenotype in mice, rats and rabbits59.
Unfortunately, proinflammatory cascades are complex and redundant. Although inflammatory responses in preterm lungs may differ from those in term or adult lungs62, limited clinical attempts to block oxidants with antioxidants and to block inflammation with inflammatory modulators have been uniformly unsuccessful in treating BPD in infants63,64, with the exception of postnatal corticosteroids. Corticosteroids decrease the incidence of BPD when given soon after birth and prevent the progression of lung injury to BPD when given in the first weeks of life65. For example, the potent general anti-inflammatory drug dexamethasone can decrease BPD incidence in preterm infants, although not without complications. However, anti-inflammatory treatments that target specific inflammatory mediators have been ineffective to date60.
A striking difference between animal models and very preterm infants who develop BPD is that infants are exposed multiple times to factors that alter lung development, such as preterm birth and its associated pathologies, pre-eclampsia, antenatal steroids, infection and/or inflammation, maternal smoking, antenatal and postnatal nutrition, genetic background, sex and ethnicity30. Each of these factors changes the response of the preterm lungs to injury. Of note, the infants who are at highest risk of BPD are extremely premature — for example, an infant born at 24 weeks of gestation is born 4 months early (~65% of normal gestation length) and therefore has structurally under-developed lungs (Fig. 4) that are often able to support gas exchange but are easily injured. The progression of lung injury to BPD in infants is not the same as the progression that occurs in acute lung injury in adults, as the primary insults (supplemental oxygen and ventilation-mediated injury) in preterm infants can continuously injure the lungs, often for months, depending on the nature of respiratory support and related ventilator strategies (see below). Although these extremely preterm infants can frequently still develop fairly normal lungs, the risk of life-long respiratory and cardiovascular impairment remains high. Insufficient knowledge of the interactions of lung development, injury and repair pathways hampers the development of effective treatments.
Further confounding the epidemiology and pathophysiology of BPD are very preterm infants who initially have almost normal lung function but cannot tolerate modest initial oxygen and ventilation and progress to early respiratory death or severe BPD39. The converse are infants with early severe respiratory failure who respond poorly to surfactant treatment and require very high supplemental oxygen and ventilation pressure, although lung function returns to normal over weeks. These extreme respiratory function patterns indicate that some very premature lungs are particularly sensitive to injury and do not heal, whereas others are quite resilient, with resistance to injury and with effective healing. These differences in injury and repair patterns probably result from multiple lung dysmaturity phenotypes that are caused by antenatal exposures, early postnatal exposures and different genetic backgrounds.
Perturbed lung development in BPD
Chorioamnionitis and inflammation
Inflammation is the common pathway that initiates the lung injury that can progress to BPD. Neonatal respiratory support at delivery can easily injure the premature lung during the transition from fluid-filled lungs to air breathing66. Subsequent ventilatory support and oxygen exposure can amplify injury. Some injury may be unavoidable, even with gentle assisted ventilation and surfactant treatment in infants <30 weeks gestational age. Subsequent inflammation from sepsis or necrotizing enterocolitis can increase the risk of developing BPD. These postnatal inflammatory exposures are often preceded by two antenatal exposures that are potent effectors of delayed lung development and lung injury. More than 50% of pregnancies that result in very preterm births (<28 weeks gestational age) have histological evidence of chorioamnionitis67 — inflammation of the fetal membranes, maternal decidua and, often, the amniotic fluid — which may be the proximal cause of the preterm labour. Concurrently, in ~90% of pregnancies that are at risk of preterm delivery, maternal antenatal corticosteroid treatment is prescribed to treat RDS and decrease infant mortality68. In the complex context of prematurity and BPD, these exposures confound simple interpretations of the causality of BPD.
Chorioamnionitis simply indicates an intrauterine exposure to inflammation, most often associated with Ureaplasma sp., but multiple vaginal commensals and pathogens have also been identified67. Chorioamnionitis-associated deliveries may also have ‘sterile’ inflammation. In clinical practice, the identity of the multiple microorganisms, the duration of fetal exposure and the location of the infection (decidua, amniotic fluid or fetus) are usually unknown. Studies in multiple animal models have demonstrated that fetal breathing exposes the fetal lung to infection and/or inflammation in amniotic fluid and causes lung inflammation and often a fetal inflammatory response69. Low-grade lung inflammation induces lung maturation in experimental models. In clinical practice, histologically-confirmed chorioamnionitis is associated with decreased RDS incidence70, whereas the presence of Ureaplasma sp. in cord blood is associated with increased incidence of BPD but no change in the incidence of RDS71. In another clinical series, increased severity of BPD correlated with increased severity of chorioamnionitis72. However, a summary meta-analysis of 59 studies could not definitively associate chorioamnionitis with increased BPD risk28, perhaps reflecting issues with standardizing the diagnoses of chorioamnionitis and the complex interactions of multiple perinatal risk factors.
Most very preterm fetuses exposed to chorioamnionitis are also exposed to antenatal corticosteroids, which in animal models suppress the inflammation associated with chorioamnionitis, cause an arrest of alveolarization and also induce greater lung maturation than either exposure alone73. Tolerance or preconditioning (modulation of the response to a fetal or neonatal exposure by a previous fetal exposure) is a possible reason why single fetal or neonatal exposures in animal models poorly replicate outcomes in preterm infants. Depending on timing and the exposure, a second similar or different exposure can result in a blunted or exaggerated lung injury response. In fetal sheep, an intra-amniotic injection of endotoxin causes fetal lung inflammation. However, prior chronic exposure of pregnant ewes to live Ureaplasma sp. completely blocks the fetal lung response to endotoxins74. Similarly, fetal exposure to intra-amniotic lipopolysaccharide (LPS) can protect the newborn from hypotension from intravascular LPS administration75. Very preterm infants are exposed to multiple potent antenatal and postnatal inflammatory modulators that modify injury and repair pathways, which is expressed as the clinical variability and severity of BPD.
Alterations of the lung microbiome have been recognized in multiple respiratory disorders. It is conceivable that, similar to chorioamnionitis, alterations in the lung microbiome prime the developing lung to injury76. The increasing evidence linking the microbiome in preterm infants to BPD has been analysed in a systematic review77, which reported substantial heterogeneity in the six included studies. Microbial dysbiosis may be associated with BPD progression and severity. Most of these infants were born by caesarean section and were exposed to postnatal antibiotics. Novel insights into systems biology based on ‘omics’ approaches may enable the temporal analysis of the fetal and neonatal lung and gut microbiomes in preterm infants, and ultimately permit manipulation to correct dysbiosis and restore a ‘healthy’ microbial environment.
Vascular abnormalities
Pulmonary hypertension and related pulmonary vascular disease (PVD) have long been recognized as strong contributors to poor survival in preterm infants with BPD1. A diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension that persists beyond the first few months of life has been associated consistently with mortality rates as high as 40–50%, ranging from a report in 1980 (ref.78) to a study in 2007 (refs79,80). Prospective studies have provided echocardiographic evidence of pulmonary hypertension in 14–25% of preterm infants at 36 weeks post-menstrual age (PMA), with pulmonary hypertension especially prevalent (29–58%) in infants with severe BPD81,82,83. Thus, despite major advances in perinatal and neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) care with improved survival and changes in the nature of BPD over the decades, pulmonary hypertension continues to be a prominent clinical challenge in the pathobiology and outcomes of infants with BPD.
There has been growing awareness in the past decade that pulmonary hypertension in premature infants encompasses several PVD phenotypes (Box 2), including the fairly high incidence of sustained elevation of pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) after birth that can cause profound hypoxaemia due to extrapulmonary right-to-left shunting across the foramen ovale and/or ductus arteriosus (persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN)) with a slow adaptation or ‘delayed vascular transition’75,84,85,86. Although more often considered in near-term or term infants with hypoxaemia at birth, PPHN also occurs in preterm infants and is negatively associated with gestational age (Fig. 6a). Severe parenchymal lung disease can contribute to elevated PVR; however, abnormalities of the pulmonary vasculature can also contribute to high PVR, especially in the setting of antenatal stresses, such as oligohydramnios and prolonged premature rupture of membranes84,85,86,87. Importantly, echocardiography-confirmed delayed pulmonary vascular transition86 and early pulmonary hypertension88 are associated with a higher risk of the subsequent development of BPD, late pulmonary hypertension and higher mortality86,88. Experimental studies support epidemiological findings that adverse intrauterine stimuli are sufficient to impair vascular growth and induce longstanding and severe pulmonary hypertension independent of postnatal factors, such as hyperoxia and ventilator-induced injury89.
In addition to the important effect of pulmonary hypertension, preclinical and clinical studies suggest that early disruption of lung vascular growth and function can impair growth of the distal airspace (the ‘vascular hypothesis’ of BPD)90,91,92,93. Furthermore, strong clinical studies have shown that abnormal placental vascular structure and placental hypoperfusion on histopathology are strikingly associated with neonatal outcomes of IUGR and susceptibility to subsequent development of BPD and pulmonary hypertension94,95. Prospective studies have shown that antenatal factors assessed on the first day of life30,96, cord blood biomarkers of impaired angiogenesis97,98,99 and early echocardiography findings of pulmonary hypertension shortly after birth are strongly linked to the risk of BPD, pulmonary hypertension, prolonged NICU hospitalization and late respiratory outcomes in childhood83,100 (Fig. 6b–d). Thus, antenatal determinants not only cause abnormalities of short-term respiratory function, as reflected by NICU course, but early injury in utero causes sustained disruption of lung and pulmonary vascular structure throughout infancy, reflecting the adverse effect of fetal programming89,101 (Fig. 1). Antenatal stresses, including chorioamnionitis and pre-eclampsia (with or without IUGR), in preterm neonates contribute to BPD risk102,103,104, although data from animal models of mechanisms linking antenatal stress to BPD pathogenesis and late cardiorespiratory outcomes are limited.
Diagnosis, screening and prevention
Diagnosis
BPD was first described in moderately preterm infants in an era when supplemental oxygen was the primary therapy for severe RDS1 and mortality was >50%. Since then, the definition of BPD has evolved (Table 1), in large part because of the improved survival of extremely preterm infants and the new modalities used to support them (Box 1).
Current challenges in defining BPD
For most diseases, diagnosis is an end in itself. For preterm infants, a diagnosis of BPD is more akin to a functional lung assessment at the time a preterm infant is expected to transition out of hospital (similar to how forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) is used in conditions such as cystic fibrosis)105. More than 30 years after BPD was defined by Shennan et al.106, how well a BPD diagnosis can predict pulmonary outcomes in infancy and childhood, and how those long-term pulmonary outcomes should be defined, remain primary research and clinical questions107.
The populations at risk and respiratory treatment strategies have also evolved since publication of the 2001 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) workshop report108. The number and survival of the smallest and most preterm infants has increased, and some NICUs now routinely care for babies born at 22 weeks of gestation24,26. Respiratory care practices have also changed, as recently documented by the Prematurity and Respiratory Outcomes Program (PROP) cohort of 765 surviving infants of <29 weeks of gestation109. In the PROP cohort, 359 infants (47%) were treated with nasal cannula flow at 36 weeks PMA, including 95 infants (12%) on flow with room air. This creates new problems for BPD classification, as it is not possible to differentiate whether flow is needed for control of breathing or for lung parenchymal injury. Data capture outside a rigorous research environment is also challenging. In the database maintained by the National Perinatal Registry of the Netherlands, only 67% of preterm infants were correctly categorized according to the NHLBI workshop definition110, owing predominantly to a false-negative diagnosis rate of 31%, including 9% with severe BPD. A bedside analysis of the ‘shift’ of the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve (accomplished through simultaneous measurement of FiO2 and peripheral saturation at a single time point) was proposed as an objective test for the presence and severity of BPD111,112. This measurement would provide more accurate assessment of oxygen need than the Walsh ‘physiological test’, but would be difficult to accomplish in most infants outside a research protocol. A retrospective analysis of infants from the NICHD Neonatal Research Network has led to a proposal to modify the 2018 NICHD definition3 to a severity scale that is based on the use of positive pressure at 36 weeks PMA instead of supplemental oxygen. Infants were classified as no BPD (no support), grade 1 (nasal cannula ≤2 l/min), grade 2 (nasal cannula >2 l/min or non-invasive positive airway pressure), or grade 3 (invasive mechanical ventilation). These criteria predicted death or serious respiratory morbidity at 18–26 months corrected age in 81% of infants in the study113.
Although BPD is a ‘yes/no’ diagnosis at 36 weeks PMA, the term has become shorthand for the presence of respiratory morbidity in a preterm infant before and after discharge from hospital. It is increasingly recognized that defining BPD at 36 weeks PMA by the use of oxygen alone is inadequate. Data from the Canadian Neonatal Network revealed that oxygen use and/or respiratory support is a better indicator of chronic respiratory insufficiency than oxygen alone, and that assessment at term equivalent (40 weeks PMA) increases the predictive value14. Newer proposed definitions have suggested quantifying oxygenation through assessment of oxygen dissociation curves, or alternatively relying solely on the amount of positive pressure an infant receives at 36 weeks PMA112,113. One of the greatest needs is a definition and severity scale to systematically describe the continuum of disease severity for at least the first year of life. One promising example is the Chronic Lung Disease of Infancy (CLDi) score107, although, like BPD, it is based on details of clinical management, such as supplemental oxygen, bronchodilators and the need for rehospitalization. More objective measures, such as pulmonary function testing, require sedation and are not yet practical outside the research setting. A challenge for any classification system beyond the birth hospitalization is to account for other environmental confounders, such as smoking and viral infections.
The 2001 NHLBI workshop definition took the important step of including a BPD severity scale108, and infants with severe BPD were subsequently found to have higher mortality and rates of adverse outcomes after discharge than those with mild or moderate disease114. However, the definition of severe BPD was overly broad, and combined infants receiving 31% oxygen by low flow nasal cannula with infants on high ventilator settings and receiving drugs for pulmonary hypertension. This issue was partly addressed by the NHLBI 2018 revision, which reserved grade 3 BPD for infants receiving positive pressure or nasal cannula flow >3 l/min in addition to oxygen3. To better refine the approach to defining disease severity for clinical care and research, the BPD Collaboration Group recommended that severe BPD be further subclassified, with infants receiving only nasal cannula oxygen at 36 weeks PMA defined as type 1 severe BPD and infants requiring mechanical ventilation defined as type 2 severe BPD115. The Canadian Neonatal Network added weight to this idea by showing that a more severe BPD diagnosis (that is, at 36 weeks PMA requiring oxygen plus respiratory support versus oxygen only) better predicted serious respiratory morbidity at 18–22 months14. However, because of the low incidence of type 2 severe BPD in any single centre, long-term outcomes remain poorly understood for this population. In addition, although pulmonary hypertension is a common comorbidity and probably contributes to the pathophysiology of severe BPD, it has not been incorporated in any existing definition116.
The most severe BPD leads to early mortality prior to 36 weeks PMA. Although this outcome was estimated to occur in 3% of the PROP cohort117, these especially high-risk infants have been inconsistently classified using existing definitions. The 2018 NICHD workshop definition proposed a grade 3A BPD for infants with early death between 14 days postnatal age and 36 weeks PMA from persistent parenchymal lung disease and respiratory failure that is not attributable to other neonatal morbidities. Further work and validation of the NICHD BPD risk calculator49 is needed to better identify this population of infants as early as possible in their clinical course (ideally before 14 days), as a particularly high-risk group for novel therapies.
Finally, future BPD definitions should provide strong specificity in addition to sensitivity. In the PROP cohort, about 50% of infants with persistent respiratory disease at 1 year of life had no or mild BPD at 36 weeks PMA96. Improving predictive value will require better objective measurements and biomarkers of lung injury and BPD and the ability to incorporate antenatal factors, such as IUGR, maternal hypertension, maternal smoking and male sex.
Screening and prevention
Biomarkers
Prevention of BPD and long-term cardiorespiratory impairment remains elusive, making identification of early predictive BPD biomarkers to guide new therapies a laudable goal. Preterm infants with differing risks of developing BPD have been enrolled in early prevention trials, sometimes with adverse consequences. A prime example is the trials of high-dose dexamethasone, which was later found to be associated with a higher risk of cerebral palsy and intestinal perforation118. BPD is a heterogeneous disease resulting from multiple pathophysiological processes, with varying magnitudes of impairment of alveolar septation, lung fibrosis and abnormal vascular development and remodelling119. Failure to identify subpopulations at highest risk and with distinct mechanisms of disease (endotypes) contributes to exposure to therapies that are unlikely to benefit or may cause harm to individual patients, as well as scepticism about biologically plausible therapies that may benefit a subset of at-risk infants120,121. Identifying infants at high risk of BPD at birth is possible, as was shown for the PROP cohort96. Infants who have a persistent need for respiratory support beyond 10–14 days of age are at the highest risk of a BPD diagnosis at 36 weeks96,122. Although persistent oxygen requirement in the first weeks of life may be a clinical predictor of later BPD, it provides little information about disease endotypes or therapeutic interventions that may benefit individual patients.
A good BPD biomarker should be easily measurable, be affordable, use a reliable assay with high analytical sensitivity and specificity, predict later lung disease or serve as a surrogate for long-term respiratory outcomes, elucidate underlying pathophysiological mechanisms (thereby refining BPD risk by endotypes) and be validated in diverse replication cohorts. A validated BPD biomarker offers the potential to reduce health-care costs and the risks of broadly applying ineffective therapies. Biomarkers may be valuable for earlier diagnosis of BPD, enabling initiation of therapies when they may be more effective or avoidance of therapies and their potential hazards119. A validated biomarker may also facilitate the development of tailored, personalized therapeutic approaches and improve patient endotyping prior to study randomization, thereby enhancing safety and efficacy of randomized controlled trials of novel therapies. Conversely, biomarker testing may increase screening costs and result in fewer infants who are eligible for trials, thus requiring larger multicentre collaborative efforts120.
Despite their promise, there are many challenges to identifying BPD biomarkers. An important consideration is the optimal biomarker source or specimen type, which could include DNA, microRNA, amniotic fluid, tracheal aspirate, blood, urine and stool. For example, the levels of IL-1β, IL-6, CXCL10 and uric acid are substantially higher in tracheal aspirate but not in plasma of patients with moderate and severe BPD than in that of infants with no BPD123. The best approach to normalizing a sample for volume collected or dilution factors in some specimen types, such as tracheal aspirate and urine, must be determined. The optimal timing for measurement of the biomarker and therefore therapeutic intervention (at birth and/or the first hours, days or weeks of life) must also be ascertained. Normal patterns of biomarker expression must be determined across a range of gestational and postnatal ages to identify patterns that predict disease or deviation from normal development. Determining the appropriate control group is a unique challenge for research in the preterm population. Healthy term infants may not represent an appropriate control when biomarker expression changes with developmental maturation. It is not always clear whether the absolute value or a change in biomarker level over time will yield the most predictive signal or whether to apply cut-off values or quartiles for risk stratification. Last, interactions among various biomarkers must be taken into account; for example, the balance of pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines or pro-oxidants and antioxidants may be a better predictor of BPD and later respiratory morbidity than a single biomarker of inflammation or oxidative stress.
Various biomarkers have been studied in association with BPD but have yet to be validated as predictors of important long-term outcomes (see Table 2 for a non-exhaustive list of BPD biomarkers). Ideal biomarkers for BPD will target causal pathways that have been implicated in BPD pathogenesis120,121, such as biomarkers of endothelial injury and dysfunction124,125; growth factors and biomarkers of altered angiogenesis6,126,127,128,129,130,131; biomarkers of epithelial injury and fibrosis132,133,134,135; biomarkers of nitric oxide deficiency or insufficiency120,136,137,138,139,140; biomarkers of oxidative stress, oxidant and antioxidant capacity, and redox status141,142,143; oxyradical biomarkers141,142,143,144; biomarkers of inflammation and host immune responses129,145,146; genomic, epigenomic, metabolomic147, microbiomic148, methylomic and transcriptomic biomarkers119,149; lung function measures119,150; MRI of the lungs for measurement of perfusion, blood flow, ventilation, gas exchange, mechanics and early changes in alveolar structure119; and biochemical151 and physiological biomarkers of vascular injury and pulmonary hypertension80,82,123,140,152. A 2013 systematic review identified serum KL6, CC16 and neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, and end-tidal carbon monoxide (etCO), as performing well in predicting BPD in preterm infants153. Identification of early markers of endothelial or vascular injury may lead to mechanistic interventions to support normal vascular and alveolar growth and prevent BPD.
Rare single-gene diseases with a BPD-like phenotype probably occur in preterm infants. In the absence of a high suspicion of such a single-gene pulmonary disease, genomic analysis is unlikely to be useful as a screening biomarker. To date, only a few underpowered genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on BPD have been published149,154 (reviewed in ref.37). Very large genomic studies with international or multicentre participation and including multiple ethnicities, antenatal risk factors and careful definition of phenotypes, may provide important clues about pathogenetic pathways and BPD endotypes. Although identification of biomarker-defined BPD endotypes holds promise for a new era of BPD prevention research, none of the biomarkers discussed above have been effectively used. Harnessing the promise of biomarkers will depend on identification and validation of affordable, reproducible, point-of-care or rapid biomarker tests and advances in computational biology and artificial intelligence155.
Management
Short-term management
In the absence of effective interventions to prevent preterm birth, treatment strategies have focused on reducing exposure to ventilation using an endotracheal tube, to avoid or minimize long-term lung and brain damage in preterm infants (Table 3). Of note, some clinical studies have suggested that BPD is an independent risk factor for poor neurodevelopmental outcomes, even in the absence of definite brain injuries, such as intraventricular haemorrhage or hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy156,157. For example, motor functions, cognitive development and academic progress are worse in preterm infants with BPD than in those without BPD158, possibly because strategies to protect the lungs might also be neuroprotective.
Avoiding intubation and ventilation
Attempts to avoid lung injury in extremely preterm infants have led to recommendations to avoid intubation and ventilation in the first minutes of life and a preference for non-invasive respiratory support159. Besides nasal continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP), nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) and high-flow nasal cannulae have become more popular, but the efficacy of these respiratory support methods in reducing the rates of BPD has been modest160,161,162,163. Exogenous surfactant therapy improves neonatal outcomes, including reducing mortality, air leak and the combined outcome of death or BPD164,165. Traditionally, surfactant has been administered using an endotracheal tube. A number of techniques have been developed for the delivery of surfactant to infants who are managed with NCPAP, including less-invasive surfactant administration (LISA)166, which uses McGill’s forceps to guide a feeding tube between the vocal cords. Alternatively, minimally invasive surfactant therapy (MIST)167 uses a firmer vascular catheter and does not require forceps. A meta-analysis of six randomized trials in 895 infants showed that surfactant delivered using a thin catheter reduced the composite outcome of death or BPD compared with conventional intubation for surfactant delivery168. Some NICUs have responded to this evidence enthusiastically and implemented routine administration of surfactant to infants on NCPAP. Others have been more cautious and await the results of ongoing larger randomized controlled trials to determine the place of this therapy in modern neonatal intensive care169. Alternative approaches to surfactant administration, such as nebulization170 and administration into the pharynx or via a laryngeal mask airway171, have potential but require further rigorous assessment before general use.
Based on evidence that extremely preterm infants exhibit persistent surfactant dysfunction, late or repeated surfactant administration has been explored. Although the TOLSURF trial showed no difference in survival at 36 weeks between infants without BPD receiving late surfactant administration versus no surfactant, there was a trend toward improvement at 40 weeks (with >20% decrease in the number infants requiring respiratory support at 40 weeks) and a substantial decrease in the number of infants who required home respiratory support during the first year172,173, an issue that is very important for parents because of the level of stress they experience.
Caffeine
Treatment with respiratory stimulants, such as caffeine, is the best-evaluated treatment for reducing BPD risk. The Caffeine for Apnea of Prematurity (CAP) trial demonstrated that caffeine administration reduces the risk of BPD and shortens the duration of ventilation with an endotracheal tube and exposure to supplemental oxygen174. Importantly, these short-term benefits are followed by an improvement in cognitive and motor outcomes in infants at 18 months of age175. Important questions about caffeine remain, including whether a higher dose and prolonged treatment lead to further improvements in important outcomes.
Corticosteroids
Antenatal steroid therapy represents a major advance in perinatal care, which has resulted in reduced mortality, respiratory distress syndrome, intraventricular haemorrhage and necrotizing enterocolitis, although it does not reduce rates of BPD176.
Corticosteroids are powerful downregulators of inflammation and have been widely used postnatally to prevent and treat BPD. Concerns about adverse effects of these agents, such as neurodevelopmental impairment, mostly with dexamethasone, in the early 2000s led to recommendations against their use177. Further evidence has emerged suggesting that the benefits may outweigh the dangers when the risk of BPD is high (>50%)178. In a small randomized controlled trial, a short course of dexamethasone delivering a lower initial and total dosage than used previously led to a reduction in the duration of ventilation and was not associated with long-term neurodevelopmental impairment179,180. The current decade has seen the pendulum swing back in favour of the prescription of corticosteroids. A European survey showed that 13.9% of infants born between 24 and 29 weeks of gestation were prescribed postnatal corticosteroids181. However, substantial variation in prescription occurred in practice (3.1–49.4%) across the regions surveyed, which was not explained by neonatal characteristics. The authors suggest that this may reflect different interpretations of the evidence, in particular for infants at highest risk of BPD.
Other attempts to improve the risk/benefit ratio of steroid therapy have involved evaluation of other corticosteroids and routes of administration. Based on extensive studies by Watterberg et al.104,182,183,184, the PREMILOC study compared the early use of 10 days of hydrocortisone therapy to placebo in 523 infants <28 weeks of gestation185. Unfortunately, the trial was stopped at 66% of planned recruitment because of financial considerations. The primary outcome, survival without BPD, was higher with hydrocortisone treatment than with placebo (60% versus 51%, P = 0.04). Follow-up of survivors at 2 years of age revealed no important differences in rates of neurodevelopmental impairment186. A smaller trial evaluated the effect of hydrocortisone administered for 22 days in 372 infants born <30 weeks of gestation who were ventilator-dependent between day 7 and day 14 of life187. There were no important differences in rates of death or BPD between the hydrocortisone and placebo groups. The most recent individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis including four randomized controlled trials (982 infants) suggests that early low-dose hydrocortisone therapy increases survival without BPD in very preterm infants, despite an increased risk of intestinal perforation (when given in association with indomethacin) and late-onset sepsis188.
Avoidance of systemic administration underpinned the NEuroSIS trial of inhaled budesonide189,190. Although budesonide reduced the rate of BPD, a follow-up study showed no improvement in rate of death or disability and an increased risk of mortality compared with placebo. In a randomized controlled trial of 265 infants weighing <1,500 g who were treated with combination budesonide and surfactant (Survanta) or surfactant alone administered intratracheally, rates of death or BPD were 66% with surfactant alone and 42% with the combination therapy191. Follow-up into infancy revealed no differences in rates of neurodevelopmental impairment. Although promising, uncertainty about the optimal dose persists192 and this intervention needs to be tested further in larger, multicentre trials.
Inhaled nitric oxide
Inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) is an effective, widely used treatment for neonatal pulmonary hypertension. Studies in animal models showed that NO is required for normal lung development and that replacement therapy may benefit the injured lung193,194. However, these benefits have not been replicated in human infants. The authors of an IPD meta-analysis that included 14 randomized controlled trials and 3,430 preterm infants suggested that routine use of iNO in this population could not be recommended195. Observations that the effectiveness of iNO might vary by ethnicity led to an IPD meta-analysis examining this question. A pooled analysis of three randomized controlled trials showed an interaction between ethnicity and the outcome death or BPD. A reduction in rate of this outcome was found in the African American population but not the white or Hispanic groups196. This observation may be regarded as hypothesis-generating and an appropriate basis for further prospective randomized controlled trials197.
Oxygen saturation targeting
Balancing the risks and benefits of oxygen therapy has been a long-term, unrealized goal of neonatal intensive care. Currently, oxygen administration to preterm infants is titrated to achieve certain oxygen saturation ranges. An IPD meta-analysis of five high-quality randomized controlled trials comparing high (91–95%) and low (85–89%) saturation ranges provides useful guidance for clinicians198. The higher range was associated with a reduced risk of death and necrotizing enterocolitis but no difference in the primary outcome, the combined rate of death or major disability at a corrected age of 18–24 months. Treatment for retinopathy of prematurity was more common in infants in the high than in the low saturation target group but there was no difference in the rates of blindness. Importantly, there was no important difference in the rates of BPD between the two treatment groups.
Long-term management
Despite advances in early respiratory care to minimize ventilator-induced lung injury from delivery to later times, some preterm infants develop severe chronic respiratory disease and related comorbidities that persist throughout their NICU course and after NICU discharge. Prolonged care needs include tracheostomy with mechanical ventilation, high FiO2 concentrations and multiple respiratory medications, such as intermittent corticosteroids, bronchodilators, diuretics and other drugs.
Preterm infants who require prolonged respiratory support at 36 weeks corrected age, including the need for tracheostomy and chronic ventilator care, constitute the most severe subgroup of BPD by NIH criteria (defined as type 2 severe BPD; Table 1). These infants are at the highest risk of late mortality, poor cardiopulmonary outcomes and extensive comorbidities, including worse somatic growth, neurocognitive problems and developmental delays115. Management is further complicated by the diverse contributors to the underlying lung pathophysiology, including airways, airspace and vascular components that probably define distinct ‘respiratory phenotypes’199 (Box 3). Better characterization of key physiological contributions to pathophysiology in individual patients with severe BPD will probably enhance overall management and result in more selective and targeted use of pharmacological agents for therapy.
The goals and challenges in the management of cardiopulmonary dysfunction in the setting of the complex problems associated with severe BPD are strikingly different from those primarily focused on disease prevention and short-term therapies115,116,199,200,201. Despite some consensus recommendations115,200, striking variations exist in respiratory care, diagnostic evaluations, selection and use of drug therapies, patterns of long-term follow-up and other factors that reflect many differences among centres and among practitioners116. In the absence of data from multicentre randomized controlled trials, current approaches for the long-term management of severe BPD remain primarily based on clinical experience, physiology-based strategies and small case series. Thus, optimal management strategies to enhance long-term outcomes in patients with severe BPD remain uncertain.
In addition to the absence of proven and effective evidence-based strategies to improve outcomes, patients with chronic ventilator-dependent BPD have historically been cared for in acute care settings. Management strategies for chronic disease differ considerably from those for acute respiratory failure, especially regarding approaches to mechanical ventilation200 (Fig. 7). When compared with approaches for acute respiratory failure, neonatologists may have less experience with ventilator management of infants with severe BPD and the different approaches to optimize care. Most importantly, in the setting of chronic complex lung disease, poor communication can exist among providers, subspecialists, nursing staff and families during prolonged hospitalization, which can lead to inconsistent care and adverse outcomes. High staff turnover and infrequent discussions among doctors and bedside staff and between parents and the medical team may contribute to these inconsistencies. Interdisciplinary care teams have the potential to alleviate many of these issues and improve outcomes in these infants. The formation of such teams has been associated with improved survival202, shorter hospitalization and reduced costs203. The clinical course in infants with severe BPD is complex, with multiple morbidities, including frequent hospitalization throughout childhood, and often with poor continuity of care115,199. As a result, linking in-patient and long-term out-patient care is important for enhancing the continuity of care, understanding the complex clinical course, and anticipating complications due to persistent morbidities and other issues115.
The developing lung has remarkable capacity for remodelling, yet disease of the airways, airspace and vasculature can persist (Fig. 8a). Multiple studies have shown abnormalities in lung function and structure in patients with BPD that persist throughout childhood, adolescence and young adulthood. In addition, several studies have further emphasized that prematurely born young adults with or without a history of BPD are at risk of PVD and abnormal cardiac performance204,205,206,207,208,209,210. These multiple reports suggest that there is a high risk of severe respiratory impairment after an apparent ‘honeymoon’ period during childhood and highlight the vital importance of early interventions, linking early NICU care with close follow-up in the ambulatory setting over time, and further strengthening collaborations between paediatric and adult subspecialists, especially in the fields of pulmonary medicine and cardiology. More research is clearly needed to determine optimal strategies to improve lung and cardiovascular health across the lifespan in preterm infants with and without severe BPD to ultimately improve quality of life (QOL).
Quality of life
Premature infants with BPD have a longer initial hospitalization than those without BPD211, and BPD remains a substantial life-long burden. The costs of the disorder are both social and economic and are measured in impaired childhood health and QOL, family stress, economic hardship and increased health-care costs212,213,214.
Support for parents
Mothers of very preterm infants experience substantially more psychological distress in the first months of life than mothers of full-term infants. This stress may continue for the first few years beyond discharge from the NICU, particularly for parents of the highest-risk infants215. As infants with severe BPD reach term-equivalent gestation, their parents are often asked whether they prefer oxygen and home monitoring or a more prolonged hospital stay. At least half of parents express fear over home oxygen while still in the hospital, although by 3 months, most parents seem to adapt, and prefer this option to facilitate earlier discharge to home216. The stress of caring for a baby with severe BPD extends well beyond the first few months of life. In one parental survey, parental perceived health-related QOL of children with severe BPD at 18–36 months corrected age was substantially lower than that of children born at term, and also lower than that of preterm children without BPD217. Parents vividly described living in fear of their baby catching a cold, being rehospitalized, or dying from BPD, and considered that they were not provided with enough support and education to meet their needs218.
Respiratory outcomes
Up to 50% of children with BPD are rehospitalized during the first 2 years of life219,220. Respiratory viruses, such as respiratory syncytial virus, influenza virus and rhinovirus, frequently precipitate pulmonary exacerbations, increasing the risk of hospitalization in this age group221,222,223.
Lung function, measured as FEV1, has improved in preterm infants over the past few decades224. Nevertheless, children born preterm with and without BPD continue to have lower lung function than children born at term225,226. Children with BPD have a higher risk of having asthma-like symptoms during pre-school and school-age years199,227,228,229,230. Symptoms of wheezing, cough, airway reactivity and shortness of breath are frequently encountered in this population, along with exercise-induced expiratory flow limitation228,231,232. Impaired postnatal alveolar growth may also occur in children with BPD. A study in young children with BPD found normal alveolar volumes but decreased pulmonary diffusion capacity, consistent with impaired alveolar growth compared with children born at term233. However, another study in school-age children born extremely prematurely showed similar alveolar sizes as in term and mildly preterm infants, suggesting the capacity for catch-up alveolar growth234. Nonetheless, the extremely preterm children in this study had lower FEV1 values than term and mildly preterm children. Although obstructive lung disease is more commonly found in children with BPD than in those without BPD, restrictive lung disease can also be present235. Factors contributing to chronic lung dysfunction in children with BPD can include non-synchronous increases in lung size and airway calibre (contributing to airflow obstruction), chronic airway inflammation, air trapping and emphysematous changes230,236,237,238,239,240 (Fig. 8b).
Several studies have shown a decline in lung function in preterm children as they age236,241. As an association exists between reduced lung function in early life and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in adult life, there is a concern that children with BPD are at increased risk of early-onset COPD242. Environmental exposures, including in utero and postnatal tobacco smoke exposure, may adversely affect lung function in children with BPD30. In addition, genetic31,243 and epigenetic factors29 may influence severity of respiratory symptoms and long-term outcomes in children with BPD. Risk stratification guidelines that include gestational age, lung function, and genetic and environmental factors are needed to enable identification of preterm children at increased risk of respiratory symptoms and decline during childhood and adult life.
Pulmonary vascular disease
Although numerous studies have addressed the short-term and long-term effects of BPD on respiratory QOL, few if any have accounted for the additive effects of PVD. Although not specific to BPD, QOL surveys of parents of children with pulmonary hypertension who were treated with pulmonary vasodilators have found substantially lower QOL scores and higher parental stress, with scores even worse than those reported in children with cancer or congenital heart disease244,245. Limited data indicate that treatment of BPD-related pulmonary hypertension correlates with improvements in functional status and thus presumably QOL246. Many of these infants are able to wean from vasodilator therapy, although the long-term effect of early PVD remains largely undefined.
There is growing evidence that premature infants with or without BPD who escape the neonatal window without developing clinical PVD have subclinical PVD that persists into adolescence and adulthood (Fig. 9). Echocardiographic markers, such as pulmonary artery acceleration time, indicate the presence of subtle PVD through childhood in preterm infants210,247,248,249. By adolescence, mild elevations in mean pulmonary artery pressure are detected, which are highest in preterm-born adults with BPD210. By right heart catheterization, adults who were born moderately to extremely preterm also have higher mean pulmonary artery pressure than those born at term205. Although most individuals in these studies fell below treatment thresholds, numerous studies now associate subclinical elevations in mean pulmonary artery pressure with increased overall mortality250,251,252,253. Finally, right ventricular function is a primary driver of overall function and QOL in preterm-born adults with PVD. Limited evidence demonstrates right ventricular dysfunction in preterm-born adults despite subclinical PVD, and thus potential for persistent impairment in QOL205,208.
Outlook
Since 2005, the prevalence of BPD in preterm infants in the Vermont Oxford Network has dropped from 31% to 28%254. Worldwide, rates of BPD vary from 13% to 32% in the iNEO reference (VLBW infants born weighing <1,500 g at 24+0 to 31+6 weeks gestation and admitted to the contributing neonatal units of participating countries during the period 2007–2010)18. The prevalence of BPD has shown only a limited change in spite of dramatic changes in practice during the same time period255, including increased use of antenatal corticosteroids for the promotion of lung maturity and increased use of various postnatal interventions, including high-frequency oscillatory ventilation and, paradoxically, the increased use of less-invasive ventilation techniques. This begs the question as to why so many of the current therapeutic initiatives have failed to meaningfully reduce the prevalence of BPD.
Randomized controlled trials have shown minimal decreases in the prevalence of BPD with the use of these interventions, such as elective high-frequency oscillatory ventilation256. Improved outcomes are seen in the use of volume-targeted ventilation compared to pressure-limited ventilation, but the number of trials is low and the evidence is imprecise257. However, the results regarding less-invasive respiratory support are more promising. Aggressive delivery room intubation, surfactant administration and ongoing assisted ventilation were less effective than stabilization on NCPAP and selective surfactant administration in minimizing BPD258.
Both early use259 and later use260 of corticosteroids substantially decrease the risk of BPD. However, research on corticosteroid use has stalled because of concerns about long-term developmental outcomes in treated infants. In particular, the hope that hydrocortisone would be a safer alternative to high-dose dexamethasone has not fully born fruit. Hydrocortisone may or may not be as effective as dexamethasone, and few trials have demonstrated that it is truly safer. However, the decreasing use of steroids in the past decade, to a baseline of 8% in VLBW infants24, is laudable. Whereas caffeine administration seems to decrease the risk of BPD in various at-risk populations174, other pharmacological therapies, such as vitamin A, have not found widespread use261. The debate about the role of iNO in both the prevention and the treatment of evolving BPD continues, but little evidence exists to support a meaningful impact of this treatment262.
The future of clinical care of BPD will undoubtedly rely on a greater understanding of the ‘clinical phenotype’ of infants with BPD; that is, understanding the contribution of airway disease, parenchymal lung disease and PVD to the respiratory difficulty3. A greater appreciation of the vast difference between the underlying pulmonary vascular pathology of evolving or established BPD and the pathophysiology of prematurity in the newly born preterm infant is essential to the establishment of effective approaches to the care of these infants. Refinements in BPD definitions will clearly help in the identification of infants who are at higher risk of BPD (and thus might benefit from future trials of either available therapies, such as corticosteroids, or novel therapies that are yet to be tested) and give a greater understanding of the extent of improvement (or lack of improvement) that is associated with various interventions. However, existing definitions (such as supplemental oxygen at 36 weeks PMA) predict poor outcome and continue to be useful in clinical practice to decrease the prevalence of BPD in NICUs14 (see list of priorities in Box 4).
Perhaps through improved quality of care and by enhancing each of these small benefits, we might see continued improvement in outcomes by reducing the incidence and severity of BPD263. Top performing neonatal units maintain rates of BPD as low as 20%254. For the future, we will have to look to these incremental improvements, as well as breakthrough therapies, such as mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs), to truly address this problem.
Emerging treatments
Within less than 10 years from the initial proof of concept studies264,265, promising preclinical data with MSCs266 have lead to phase I clinical trials. Two trials have shown that administration of a single intratracheal dose of allogeneic cord blood-derived MSCs in extreme preterm infants during the first week of life is feasible and without severe adverse events attributable to the intervention267,268. Similarly, the successful off-label use of repeated intravenous injections of bone marrow-derived MSCs in two extreme preterm infants with severe and advanced BPD supports the feasibility of this therapy269. Ongoing phase II trials will indicate whether MSC therapy is safe and effective. Numerous other types of repair cells are being investigated in the clinic270 and in the laboratory for use in BPD therapy. Despite rapid clinical translation, cell-based therapies for regenerative indications are still in their infancy and major knowledge gaps remain. A better understanding of the biology and mechanism of action of MSCs and other repair cell types271,272,273 and the link between resident stem or progenitor cells and disease pathogenesis274,275,276,277, together with technological advances, will allow the development of potency assays and manufacturing processes278 to yield superior cell products that may truly curb complications of prematurity and improve outcomes.
Other anti-inflammatory agents, such as IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) or modulators of the NOD-, LRR- and pyrin domain-containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome upstream of IL-1β, seem to be encouraging in preclinical studies (reviewed in ref.279). For example, recombinant human insulin-like growth factor 1 complexed with its binding protein (rhIGF1–rhIGFBP3) was investigated in a phase II trial for the prevention of retinopathy of prematurity in 121 extreme preterm infants280. Although development of retinopathy of prematurity was unaltered, rhIGF1–rhIGFBP3 treatment decreased the occurrence of severe BPD. These results warrant a trial focused on BPD as the primary end point.
Expected benefits of lung research
Technical advances in imaging, transcriptomics, epigenetics and lineage labelling are providing ever more detailed insights into the diverse cell types, including stem or progenitor cells, and the molecular processes by which cells interact to form and regenerate the lung after injury53,54,55,281,282,283. Identification of the signalling and transcriptional networks that direct lung formation, repair and function might lead to the identification of pertinent biomarkers and inform clinical strategies to protect the critical progenitor cells and processes on which lung formation and repair depend. These insights will enable development of therapeutics aimed at enhancing normal tissue regeneration while inhibiting the cellular and molecular processes that underlie pathological tissue remodelling and loss of tissue that underlies many chronic lung diseases. In spite of severe lung dysfunction and injury associated with preterm birth, most infants with BPD achieve remarkable recovery of lung structure and function. Understanding the resilience of the neonatal lung will provide further insights that will be highly relevant to the processes of normal and pathological repair associated with chronic lung diseases that are active throughout the lifespan.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants (U01HL122642 and U01HL134745 to J.A.W.; RO1HL68702, R01HL145679 and U01HL12118-01 to S.H.A.; and K24 HL143283 to M.L.), and funding from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) to P.G.D. and from the Canadian Institute for Health Research, Stem Cell Network and the Ontario Institute for Regenerative Medicine to B.T. The authors thank J. Kitzmiller and C.-L. Na for their contributions in obtaining images.
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Introduction (B.T.); Epidemiology (M.L. and B.T.); Mechanisms/pathophysiology (J.A.W., S.H.A., A.H.J. and B.T.); Diagnosis, screening and prevention (R.H.S., J.L.A. and B.T.); Management (P.G.D., S.H.A. and B.T.); Quality of life (K.N.G., S.A.McG.-M. and B.T.); Outlook (R.F.S. and B.T.); Overview of the Primer (B.T.).
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A.H.J. consults occasionally for Chiesi Farmaceutici about BPD and surfactant. S.H.A has served as a consultant for Takeda Pharmaceuticals. R.H.S. is a consultant for Takeda Pharmaceutical Company and for Actelion Pharmaceutical Ltd. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
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Thébaud, B., Goss, K.N., Laughon, M. et al. Bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Nat Rev Dis Primers 5, 78 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41572-019-0127-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41572-019-0127-7
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