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Effect of Early L-Carnitine Supplementation on Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Very Preterm Infants

A Double-Blind, Controlled, Randomized Clinical Trial of the Effect of Early L-Carnitine Supplementation on Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Very Preterm Infants

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 2Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01783041
Enrollment
144
Registered
2013-02-04
Start date
2013-01-31
Completion date
2021-12-28
Last updated
2023-03-08

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Prematurity, Neurodevelopmental Disorder, Carnitine Deficiency

Keywords

Prematurity, Carnitine supplementation, Neonatal Intensive Care, MRI, Amplitude-integrated EEG, NICU Network Neurobehavioral Scale, Bayley Scale of Infant Development III

Brief summary

Preterm infants are vulnerable to brain injury, nutritional deficiencies and poor early growth which places them at increased risk for developmental problems later in life. The micronutrient carnitine, which is present in breast milk and stored in the fetus late in pregnancy, has been shown to protect against brain injury in animal studies. Without supplementation, almost all preterm infants develop carnitine deficiency soon after birth. Thus it is important to determine if carnitine supplementation protects against brain injury and improves developmental outcomes in these vulnerable preterm infants. We hypothesize that preterm infants supplemented early with L-carnitine while receiving parenteral nutrition will not develop carnitine deficiency and will have improved growth in the first two weeks of life and higher scores on developmental tests when compared to control infants who did not receive carnitine.

Detailed description

Hypothesis: We hypothesize that preterm infants supplemented with early physiologic doses of L-carnitine while on parenteral nutrition will have improved short-term growth parameters and significantly higher neurobehavioral scores when compared with control infants. Methods/Design: This is a prospective, randomized controlled clinical trial involving infants with gestational age (GA) \<32 wks who are born at either the Jack D. Weiler Hospital or the Wakefield Division of Montefiore and admitted to theirNeonatal Intensive Care Unit. Informed consent will be obtained from the parents of eligible patients as early as possible within 72 hours of birth. Infants whose parents have signed an informed consent form will be randomized to receive either carnitine supplementation (50 μmol/kg/day) versus placebo within 72-96 hours of birth. Randomization: As previously described by Pande et al., enrolled patients will be randomized to either the treatment group (L-carnitine, 50 μmol/kg/day) or placebo group (5% glucose, similar volume as the L-carnitine group).28 Patients who meet study entry criteria and have signed informed parental/guardian consent will be enrolled in the study. Because gestational age and small for gestational age (SGA) status will impact our outcome measures, we will ensure they are equally distributed in the arms of the study by stratifying based upon these variables. We will analyze the two study arms using an intent-to-treat analysis. Therefore, enrolled patients will be stratified into fourgroups: gestational age 23 to 26 6/7 weeks, gestational age 27 to 29 6/7weeks, gestational age 30 to 31 6/7 weeks and small for gestational age (SGA). Patients within each stratum will be randomized by the pharmacist using a computerized block-generation with sets of 4. In the case of multiple births, all infants must meet study criteria, and the infants will be randomized as a set. One infant of the multiple-birth set will be randomly chosen for inclusion in the analysis. A recruitment log of all screened infants will be maintained. Clinicians and the nursing staff will be unaware of the arm of the treatment protocol to which the patient is assigned. Codes will be unblinded only after all patients have reached the study end-point, or at the request of the Data Safety Monitoring Board. Study supplementation: Infants randomized to the treatment group will receive 50 μmol/kg/day of L-carnitine intravenously for 2 weeks, and infants randomized to placebo will received 5% glucose, similar volume to the L-carnitine group. At two weeks, sufficient carnitine is provided in enteral feeds of either breast milk or infant formula. If no intravenous access is available before the supplementation endpoint, the equivalent dose of enteral study supplement (L-carnitine or placebo) will be administered.41 Parenteral and enteral nutrition will be provided according to standard NICU protocol. Of note, as many as 10% of the infants in the study will likely continue to rely primarily on parenteral nutrition beyond the proposed two-week supplementation period. Enteral feeds may be withheld from these infants due to underlying illnesses such as sepsis or gastrointestinal disorders like necrotizing enterocolitis. Due to the presence of underlying illness, these infants are at an even higher risk for developing developmental delays. Therefore, in study patients who are not receiving adequate enteral nutrition (100 cc/kg/day of enteral intake) after 2-weeks of study supplements, carnitine supplementation will be continued until these infant are receiving adequate enteral feeds; at this point, their physiologic carnitine requirements will be met by enteral nutrition alone.

Interventions

DRUGL-carnitine

Infants will receive L-carnitine 50 micromoles/kg/day, divided into three doses, intravenously for a minimum of 2 weeks or until they achieve enteral feeding volume of 100 cc/kg/day. If infant is receiving 100 cc/kg/day of enteral feeds before the supplementation endpoint, an equivalent dose of enteral L-carnitine will be given to the study patients.

Infants will receive 5% dextrose (placebo) three times a day (volume equivalent to the experimental drug) intravenously for a minimum of 2 weeks or until they achieve enteral feeding volume of 100 cc/kg/day. If infant is receiving 100 cc/kg/day of enteral feeds before the supplementation endpoint, an equivalent volume of enteral placebo (5% Dextrose) will be given to the study patients.

Sponsors

The Gerber Foundation
CollaboratorOTHER
Montefiore Medical Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
1 Days to 3 Days
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Infants born at equal to or less than 30 weeks gestation and with birth weight \< 1250 grams * Less than 72 hours of age * Signed parental consent

Exclusion criteria

* Critically ill infants with life expectancy less than 72 hours * Inability to obtain consent within 72 hours of birth * Potentially life-threatening congenital anomalies * Known hereditary metabolic disorders * Known chromosomal abnormalities * Terratogen exposure with symptomatic substance withdrawal * Congenital viral infections * Microcephaly * Grade IV intraventricular hemorrhage or seizures documented within the first 72 hours of life

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Time to Regain Birthweight in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controlsup to 3 weeks of ageTime (in days) for infants in both arms of the study to regain birthweight - data presented as mean +/- SD.
Neurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)at term equivalent age (38 weeks +/-1 week corrected age)NICU Network Neurobehavioral Scale (NNNS) was administered to study participants at term equivalent age (38 weeks +/-1 week corrected age). The NNNS is a 128-item standardized assessment to evaluate the neurobehavioral status of healthy and high-risk infants. Summary scores include: Attention (range 2.25-8; higher score better), Arousal (range 2-5; lower score better), Regulation (range 3.31-6.92; higher score better), Handling (range 0-0.88; lower score better), Quality of movement (range 3-6; higher score better), Excitability (range 0-9; lower score better), Lethargy (range 0-12; lower score better), Nonoptimal reflexes (range 0-10; lower score better), Asymmetric reflexes (range 0-6; lower score better), Hypertonicity (range 0-2; lower score better), Hypotonicity (range 0-3; lower score better), and Stress/abstinence scale (range 0-0.22; lower score better).

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Brain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controlsat corrected age (38 weeks +/- 1 week)Brain MRI findings including brain volumes of the cerebellum, thalamus and basal ganglia were compared in infants who received L-carnitine supplementation compared to controls.
Rate of Head Growth in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls36 weeks corrected ageHead circumference was measured at 36 weeks corrected age in both study groups (L-carnitine vs. placebo).

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Recruitment details

Infants born at \<32 weeks gestation admitted to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Weiler and Wakefield Divisions of Montefiore Medical Center were enrolled in this study.

Participants by arm

ArmCount
5% Dextrose
Infants randomized to the placebo group will receive 5% dextrose intravenously. If infant is receiving 100 cc/kg/day of enteral feeds before the supplementation endpoint, an equivalent volume of placebo (5% Dextrose) will be given to the study patients. 5% Dextrose: Infants will receive 5% dextrose (placebo) three times a day (volume equivalent to the experimental drug) intravenously for a minimum of 2 weeks or until they achieve enteral feeding volume of 100 cc/kg/day. If infant is receiving 100 cc/kg/day of enteral feeds before the supplementation endpoint, an equivalent volume of enteral placebo (5% Dextrose) will be given to the study patients.
72
L-carnitine
Infants randomized to the study group will receive L-carnitine intravenously. If infant is receiving 100 cc/kg/day of enteral feeds before the supplementation endpoint, an equivalent dose of enteral L-carnitine will be given to the study patients. L-carnitine: Infants will receive L-carnitine 50 micromoles/kg/day, divided into three doses, intravenously for a minimum of 2 weeks or until they achieve enteral feeding volume of 100 cc/kg/day. If infant is receiving 100 cc/kg/day of enteral feeds before the supplementation endpoint, an equivalent dose of enteral L-carnitine will be given to the study patients.
72
Total144

Baseline characteristics

Characteristic5% DextroseL-carnitineTotal
Age, Categorical
<=18 years
72 Participants72 Participants144 Participants
Age, Categorical
>=65 years
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Age, Categorical
Between 18 and 65 years
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Hispanic or Latino
35 Participants37 Participants72 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Not Hispanic or Latino
33 Participants32 Participants65 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
4 Participants3 Participants7 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
American Indian or Alaska Native
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Asian
2 Participants3 Participants5 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Black or African American
30 Participants28 Participants58 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
More than one race
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
2 Participants1 Participants3 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
White
38 Participants40 Participants78 Participants
Region of Enrollment
United States
72 participants72 participants144 participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
36 Participants34 Participants70 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
36 Participants38 Participants74 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
EG001
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
3 / 721 / 72
other
Total, other adverse events
4 / 729 / 72
serious
Total, serious adverse events
18 / 7224 / 72

Outcome results

Primary

Neurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)

NICU Network Neurobehavioral Scale (NNNS) was administered to study participants at term equivalent age (38 weeks +/-1 week corrected age). The NNNS is a 128-item standardized assessment to evaluate the neurobehavioral status of healthy and high-risk infants. Summary scores include: Attention (range 2.25-8; higher score better), Arousal (range 2-5; lower score better), Regulation (range 3.31-6.92; higher score better), Handling (range 0-0.88; lower score better), Quality of movement (range 3-6; higher score better), Excitability (range 0-9; lower score better), Lethargy (range 0-12; lower score better), Nonoptimal reflexes (range 0-10; lower score better), Asymmetric reflexes (range 0-6; lower score better), Hypertonicity (range 0-2; lower score better), Hypotonicity (range 0-3; lower score better), and Stress/abstinence scale (range 0-0.22; lower score better).

Time frame: at term equivalent age (38 weeks +/-1 week corrected age)

Population: The discrepancy in the numbers analyzed for this outcome compared to the enrolled participants in each study arm is related to: (1) mortality, (2) parents revoking consent, and (3) some patients were too sick for this evaluation to be performed.

ArmMeasureGroupValue (MEAN)Dispersion
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Handling0.35 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.28
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Quality of Movement4.6 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.63
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Hypertonicity0.12 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.32
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Excitability2.6 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 2
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Hypotonicity0.57 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.87
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Arousal3.95 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.6
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Asymmetrical Reflexes0.35 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.79
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Stress abstinence0.073 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.074
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Non-Optimal Reflexes3.95 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 2.25
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Regulation5.5 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.77
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Lethargy4.8 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 3
5% DextroseNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Attention4.66 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 1.62
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Lethargy5.2 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 2.6
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Attention4.29 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 1.41
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Stress abstinence0.079 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.064
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Quality of Movement4.6 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.64
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Arousal3.93 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.61
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Regulation5.5 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.84
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Handling0.36 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.23
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Hypertonicity0.14 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.43
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Hypotonicity0.22 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.46
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Asymmetrical Reflexes0.37 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 0.72
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Excitability2.59 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 1.99
L-carnitineNeurodevelopment Indices in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls (NNNS)Non-Optimal Reflexes4.2 score on a scaleStandard Deviation 2.2
p-value: <0.05Wilcoxon (Mann-Whitney)
Primary

Time to Regain Birthweight in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls

Time (in days) for infants in both arms of the study to regain birthweight - data presented as mean +/- SD.

Time frame: up to 3 weeks of age

Population: The discrepancy in the number of infants enrolled in each arm of the study and the number with data for this outcome is because of early deaths in the study as well as some parents withdrawing consent from the study.

ArmMeasureValue (MEAN)Dispersion
5% DextroseTime to Regain Birthweight in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls8.12 daysStandard Deviation 3.5
L-carnitineTime to Regain Birthweight in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls8.4 daysStandard Deviation 3.3
p-value: <0.05ANOVA
Secondary

Brain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls

Brain MRI findings including brain volumes of the cerebellum, thalamus and basal ganglia were compared in infants who received L-carnitine supplementation compared to controls.

Time frame: at corrected age (38 weeks +/- 1 week)

Population: Not all enrolled subjects had brain MRIs performed - 63 infants in both study arms had brain MRIs where brain volumes could be calculated.

ArmMeasureGroupValue (MEAN)Dispersion
5% DextroseBrain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to ControlsCerebellar volume19372 millilitersStandard Deviation 5806
5% DextroseBrain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to ControlsThalamus volume6050 millilitersStandard Deviation 1139
5% DextroseBrain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to ControlsBasal ganglia volume8611 millilitersStandard Deviation 1460
L-carnitineBrain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to ControlsCerebellar volume18189 millilitersStandard Deviation 3826
L-carnitineBrain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to ControlsThalamus volume5832 millilitersStandard Deviation 897
L-carnitineBrain Volumes in Infants Who Received L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to ControlsBasal ganglia volume8217 millilitersStandard Deviation 1192
p-value: <0.05t-test, 2 sided
Secondary

Rate of Head Growth in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls

Head circumference was measured at 36 weeks corrected age in both study groups (L-carnitine vs. placebo).

Time frame: 36 weeks corrected age

Population: The discrepancy in the number of infants enrolled in each arm of the study and the number with data for this outcome is because of early deaths in the study as well as some parents withdrawing consent from the study.

ArmMeasureValue (MEAN)Dispersion
5% DextroseRate of Head Growth in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls30.6 centimetersStandard Deviation 1.68
L-carnitineRate of Head Growth in Infants Who Receive L-carnitine Supplementation Compared to Controls30.4 centimetersStandard Deviation 1.76
p-value: <0.05ANOVA

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026