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Postneonatal Cerebral Palsy in Europe: Prevalence and Clinical Characteristics According to Contributory Events: An SCPE Study.

Delobel-Ayoub, Malika, Ehlinger, Virginie, Klapouszczak, Dana, Troha Gergeli, Anja, Sellier, Elodie, Hollody, Katalin, Virella, Daniel, Vik, Torstein, Perret, Célia, Vidart d'Egurbide Bagazgoïtia, Nicolas, Horridge, Karen and Arnaud, Catherine (2025) Postneonatal Cerebral Palsy in Europe: Prevalence and Clinical Characteristics According to Contributory Events: An SCPE Study. Paediatric and perinatal epidemiology. ISSN 1365-3016

Item Type: Article

Abstract

Postneonatal cerebral palsy (PNCP) is rare and requires large databases to be studied over time. To study the time trend of prevalence of PNCP overall and by cause, and to describe the clinical characteristics of children with PNCP according to cause and compared with children with pre/peri/neonatal CP (PPNCP). The Surveillance of Cerebral Palsy in Europe (SCPE) database was used. Primary events (the first known chronological event in the causal chain) were classified according to the SCPE classification (six main and 19 sub-categories). Prevalence trends for children born during 1976-2012 were modelled using multilevel generalised linear models. The clinical characteristics of PNCP and PPNCP cases born after 1998 were reported as proportions. The prevalence rates of PNCP were 1.76 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.37, 2.23) and 0.82 per 10,000 live births (95% CI 0.73, 0.92) in children born during 1976-1980 and 2006-2012, respectively. The models showed a 2% annual decline in overall prevalence (prevalence rate multiplied by 0.98 each year) and a 10% decline for infectious causes for every 5-year change. The prevalence rate in children born during 2006-2012 was 0.26 per 10,000 (95% CI 0.21, 0.32) for infectious causes, which remained the most frequent. No trend emerged for other causes. Unilateral spastic CP, associated impairments and severe gross motor dysfunction were more frequent in PNCP than in PPNCP, and PNCP showed predominantly grey matter injury (55.6%). Seventeen percent were born preterm. PNCP differed by cause, with cerebrovascular accidents presenting the least severe and hypoxic causes the most severe forms. Our study confirms the decrease in the prevalence of PNCP in children born up to 2012, particularly for CP, due to infectious causes, which remain the most frequent. Children with PNCP had more severe presentation overall than those with PPNCP, with severity depending on the cause. [Abstract copyright: © 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.]

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More Information

Uncontrolled Keywords: epidemiology, postneonatal cerebral palsy, aetiology, classification, complications
SWORD Depositor: Publication Router
Depositing User: Publication Router

Identifiers

Item ID: 18700
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1111/ppe.13164
ISSN: 1365-3016
URI: http://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/id/eprint/18700
Official URL: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ppe.13...

Users with ORCIDS

ORCID for Malika Delobel-Ayoub: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0090-8313
ORCID for Karen Horridge: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1834-5296
ORCID for Catherine Arnaud: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4002-802X

Catalogue record

Date Deposited: 27 Jan 2025 13:34
Last Modified: 27 Jan 2025 13:34

Contributors

Author: Malika Delobel-Ayoub ORCID iD
Author: Karen Horridge ORCID iD
Author: Catherine Arnaud ORCID iD
Author: Virginie Ehlinger
Author: Dana Klapouszczak
Author: Anja Troha Gergeli
Author: Elodie Sellier
Author: Katalin Hollody
Author: Daniel Virella
Author: Torstein Vik
Author: Célia Perret
Author: Nicolas Vidart d'Egurbide Bagazgoïtia

University Divisions

Faculty of Education and Society > School of Education

Subjects

Education > Educational Research
Education

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