- Title
Incidence, aetiology and short term outcomes of extreme hyperbilirubinaemia, in term infants born in the Western health subdistrict of Cape Town, South Africa between 2019 and 2020.
- Authors
Coraizin, Carin; Vreede, Heleen; Niekerk, Cara Van; Joolay, Yaseen
- Abstract
Extreme levels of bilirubin in newborn is a major cause of lifelong neurodevelopmental impairment, which places a financial burden on healthcare resources and caregivers. To determine the incidence, aetiology and short-term outcomes of extreme hyperbilirubinaemia in term infants born in a resource-limited setting. This is a retrospective observational study looking at term neonates with a birth weight ≥2500 g, born in the Western health subdistrict of Cape Town, South Africa, between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2020, who were exposed to a serum bilirubin level of ≥430 μmol/L in the first week of life and received care in the public health system. Extreme hyperbilirubinaemia occurred in 59 term infants. The incidence was 74 cases per 100 000 (<0.01%) live births equating to 1 case in every 1345 live births. The cause of hyperbilirubinaemia was identified in 51 of the cases (86%), the most common being ABO incompatibility (31/51, 61%), followed by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (11/51, 22%). Twelve infants (20 %) underwent an exchange transfusion. Six infants were encephalopathic. Forty-seven infants (80%) were readmitted after initial post-natal discharge, with a mean age of readmission of 113 h old (SD 31 h). The incidence of extreme hyperbilirubinaemia in the Western health subdistrict of Cape Town is higher than in high-income settings. Further work should focus on training of healthcare workers and education of caregivers, for the early detection of significant hyperbilirubinaemia to prevent neurological complications caused by bilirubin toxicity.
- Subjects
GLUCOSE-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency; MEDICAL personnel; RESOURCE-limited settings; BLOOD transfusion; BIRTH weight
- Publication
Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, 2024, Vol 70, Issue 5, p1
- ISSN
0142-6338
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1093/tropej/fmae020