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Original Articles

Vascular endothelial growth factor levels and bronchopulmonary dysplasia in preterm infants

, , , , & ORCID Icon
Pages 1517-1522 | Received 23 Sep 2019, Accepted 22 Apr 2020, Published online: 04 May 2020
 

Abstract

Background

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptors (VEGFRs) regulate both vasculogenesis, the development of blood vessels from precursor cells, and angiogenesis, the formation of blood vessels from preexisting vessels. In the fetal lung, high-affinity receptors for VEGF are expressed mainly in alveolar epithelial cells and myocytes, suggesting a paracrine role for VEGF in modulating activities in adjacent vascular endothelium. Previous studies have shown that vascular growth is impaired in bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD).

Objective

The goal of this study was to examine tracheal (T-VEGF) and gastric (G-VEGF) levels in premature infants in the first and third day of life and examine if these levels were associated with the development of BPD.

Design/methods

Tracheal aspirates from intubated infants and gastric samples from others were obtained on postnatal days 1 (D1) and 3 (D3) from 43 preterm infants (<2000 g birth weight, ≤34 wks gestation). VEGF was quantified by a VEGF Elisa Kit. Demographic, clinical, and pulmonary outcome data were collected including information on respiratory support (oxygenation index (OI) and ventilatory index (VI)) and on the development of BPD, determined at 36 weeks PMA using NICHD criteria.

Results

The mean birth weight was 1060 ± 379 g and gestational age 27.5 ± 2.8 wks. BPD was diagnosed in 26 infants who were less mature than the 17 controls without BPD. Day 1 and day 3T-VEGF concentrations did not correlate, but day 3 levels correlated with gestational age (r = 0.75, p < .05). BPD infants, characterized by longer ventilator, CPAP and oxygen days, had day 1T-VEGF levels similar to control infants (126.6 ± 194.7 vs. 149.7 ± 333.2 pg/ml) but day 3 levels were significantly lower (168.9 ± 218.8 vs. 1041.6 ± 676.7 pg/ml). Day 1G-VEGF levels reflected tracheal samples, trending lower in BPD infants. Mode of delivery, race, sex, antenatal steroid administration, chorioamnionitis, sepsis, or growth restriction did not impact VEGF levels. However, lower VEGF levels were associated with a lower VI and lower OI: Day 3 OI correlated with day 3T-VEGF (r = 0.72, p > .05), albeit not significantly. T-VEGF increased from day 1 to day 3 in controls and decreased in BPD infants. There was no relationship between oxygen, CPAP and ventilator days and day 1 or day 3T-VEGF levels.

Conclusions

BPD may be associated with low-serum VEGF levels during the first week of life. This finding is likely related to decreased expression in the lungs of the less mature infants, who are at the highest risk for BPD.

Acknowledgments

Special thanks to all respiratory therapists and nurses at RWJUH and SPUH for helping with sample collections. Special thanks to Claribel Cepeda and Theresa Le-Hoang (EOHSI Lab) for sample handling and analysis.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

The study was funded by the New Jersey Health Foundation and supported by Rutgers Pediatric Clinical Research Center (CRC).

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