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Simplifying the Finnegan Neonatal Abstinence Scoring Tool, or FNAST, could improve its use in making treatment decisions for neonatal abstinence syndrome, or NAS, study findings showed.
Researchers determined that only eight of the FNAST’s 21 screening items are necessary to properly diagnose an infant with NAS.
“This shorter assessment tool could simplify clinical assessment by focusing on components that are relatively consistent across sites,” Lori A. Devlin, DO, associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, and colleagues wrote in JAMA Network Open. “It is important to prospectively validate this scale, which could be widely used and lead to the standardization of the clinical approach and management of neonates prenatally exposed to opioids.”
For the study, Devlin and colleagues retrospectively reviewed medical records of neonates with antenatal opioid exposure using three cohorts from University of Louisville, the University of Kentucky and Tufts University. They validated their model using an external cohort of neonates enrolled in the Maternal Opioid Treatment: Human Experimental Research (MOTHER).
Neonates had opioid exposure at a gestational age of at least 36 weeks. Among 424 neonates included in the primary analysis, 238 were treated. The median time to treatment from birth was 3 days.
Devlin and colleagues combined two tremor items from the FNAST tool and removed three items — convulsions, high-pitched cry and hyperactive Moro reflex — from further analysis because they were either not observed or had “extremely different frequencies” in the cohorts. They found that eight of the remaining items were “independently associated with receipt of pharmacologic therapy.”
The eight items were: sleep less than 3 hours after feeding; tremors when disturbed or undisturbed; increased muscle tone; body temperature greater than or equal to 37.2°C; respiratory rate greater than 60 breaths per minute; excessive sucking; poor feeding; and regurgitation.
In a related commentary, Ju Lee Oei, MD, from the University of New South Wales in Australia, and TreciaWouldes, PhD, from the University of Auckland in New Zealand, characterized the tool as attractively simple, but said several questions need to be addressed, including whether the association between the eight items and NAS remains consistent over time. They said adopting a simplified tool will only be effective if it is accepted by clinicians and parents or caretakers, “which is often not the case.”
“Certainly, the work of Devlin et al highlights that much more needs to be known about how an infant responds postnatally to intrauterine drug exposure and the optimum screening, diagnostic, and treatment strategies,” they wrote. “Perhaps the ultimate goal should not be to decide whether to treat an infant with medication but to prevent poor outcomes, including neurologic harm and death.” – byKen Downey Jr.
Disclosures: The authors report no relevant financial disclosures.