Non-invasive detection of bilirubin concentrations during the first week of life in a low-resource setting along the Thailand-Myanmar border.
Bancone G., Gilder ME., Win E., Gornsawun G., Moo PK., Archasuksan L., Wai NS., Win S., Hanboonkunupakarn B., Nosten F., Carrara VI., McGready R.
BackgroundNeonatal hyperbilirubinaemia (NH) is a common problem worldwide and is a cause of morbidity and mortality especially in low-resource settings.MethodsA study was carried out at Shoklo Malaria Research Unit (SMRU) clinics along the Thailand-Myanmar border to evaluate a non-invasive test for diagnosis of NH in a low-resource setting. Performance of a transcutaneous bilirubinometer Dräger Jaundice Meter JM-105 was assessed against routine capillary serum bilirubin testing (with BR-501 microbilirubinometer) before phototherapy during neonatal care in the first week of life. Results were analysed by direct agreement and by various bilirubin thresholds used in clinical practice. Total serum bilirubin was also measured in cord blood at birth and tested for prediction of hyperbilirubinaemia requiring phototherapy in the first week of life.ResultsBetween April 2020 and May 2023, 742 neonates born at SMRU facilities were included in the study. A total of 695 neonates provided one to nine capillary blood samples for analysis of serum bilirubin (total 1244 tests) during the first week of life. Performance of transcutaneous bilirubinometer was assessed in 307 neonates who provided 687 paired transcutaneous capillary blood tests. Bilirubin levels were also measured in 738 cord blood samples. Adjusted values of transcutaneous bilirubinometer showed excellent agreement with capillary serum bilirubin concentration (intraclass correlation coefficient=0.923) and high sensitivity (>98%) at all clinical thresholds analysed across 3 years of sampling and multiple users. Concentrations of bilirubin detected in cord blood were not useful in identifying neonates at risk of hyperbilirubinaemia requiring treatment.ConclusionsThe transcutaneous bilirubinometer is a reliable tool to screen neonates and identify those needing confirmatory blood testing. Bilirubin concentrations in cord blood are not predictive of hyperbilirubinaemia in neonates.