Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Anthony Corbet is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Anthony Corbet.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1991

Decreased mortality rate among small premature infants treated at birth with a single dose of synthetic surfactant: A multicenter controlled trial

Anthony Corbet; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Steven L. Goldman; Mark C. Mammel; Diane Wold; Walker Long

To determine whether a single prophylactic dose of synthetic surfactant would reduce mortality and morbidity rates, we performed a randomized, controlled trial of Exosurf Neonatal at 19 hospitals in the United States. The Exosurf preparation (5 ml/kg) was instilled into the endotracheal tube of premature infants weighing 700 to 1100 gm during mechanical ventilation, as soon as practical after birth. Control infants were treated with air (5 ml/kg). Dose administration was performed in secrecy by clinicians who did not reveal for 2 years what they had instilled. A total of 222 infants received air and 224 received the synthetic surfactant; 36 infants with congenital pneumonia or malformations were excluded from the primary efficacy analysis. By the age of 28 days, there were 44 deaths in the air group and 27 deaths in the surfactant group (p = 0.022). By the age of 1 year after term there were 61 deaths in the air group and 35 deaths in the surfactant group (p = 0.002). Although there was no reduction in the incidence of respiratory distress syndrome, a significant reduction in the number of deaths attributed to respiratory distress syndrome, a significant reduction in the incidence of pulmonary air leaks, and significantly lower requirements for oxygen and mean airway pressure indicated that lung disease was less severe in the Exosurf-treated infants. There were no significant differences in the incidence of complications such as bronchopulmonary dysplasia, intraventricular hemorrhage, patent ductus arteriosus, necrotizing enterocolitis, and infection. The results indicate that a single prophylactic dose of Exosurf, in high-risk premature infants treated soon after birth, reduces the number of deaths from respiratory distress syndrome and the overall mortality rate.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991

A Controlled Trial of Synthetic Surfactant in Infants Weighing 1250 G or More with Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Walker Long; Anthony Corbet; Robert B. Cotton; Sherry E. Courtney; Gail McGuiness; Donnal Walter; John Watts; John Smyth; Harry Bard; Victor Chernick

Background Surfactant-replacement therapy is now recognized as a life-saving and safe intervention in small premature infants, but there is little evidence concerning its risks and benefits in larger premature infants. Methods We conducted a placebo-controlled, blinded trial in 1237 infants with respiratory distress who were enrolled at 23 hospitals in the United States and 13 hospitals in Canada. At entry all the infants weighed at least 1250 g, were receiving mechanical ventilation, and had a ratio of arterial to alveolar oxygen tension below 0.22. The initial dose of either the synthetic surfactant (Exosurf, 5 ml per kilogram of body weight) or air (the placebo) was administered less than 24 hours after birth, with a second dose given 12 hours later. A total of 614 infants were assigned to receive surfactant, and 623 to receive placebo. Results Fewer infants in the surfactant group than in the placebo group died before 28 days of age or survived at 28 days with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (7 percent vs. 12 percent, P = 0.002). In the first 28 days of life, there were fewer deaths due to respiratory distress syndrome in the surfactant group (1 percent vs. 3 percent, P = 0.043), lower overall neonatal mortality (4 percent vs. 7 percent, P = 0.04), and a lower incidence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (3 percent vs. 6 percent, P = 0.008). There was also a significantly lower incidence of pulmonary air leaks, intraventricular hemorrhage, patent ductus arteriosus, seizures, hypotension, and pulmonary hypertension in the surfactant group. The infants treated with surfactant were weaned from oxygen and mechanical ventilation significantly sooner than those given placebo, and they less often required high-frequency ventilation or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. The primary side effect observed more frequently among the infants who received surfactant treatment was pulmonary hemorrhage (six infants vs. one infant, P = 0.055). Conclusions In infants weighing at least 1250 g at birth who have respiratory distress syndrome, treatment with two doses of synthetic surfactant improves survival and reduces perinatal morbidity.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1990

Improved outcome at 28 days of age for very low birth weight infants treated with a single dose of a synthetic surfactant

Carl Bose; Anthony Corbet; Gennie Bose; Joseph A. Garcia-Prats; Layne Lombardy; Diane Wold; Deborah Donlon; Walker Long

Two identical double-blind, controlled, randomized trials were initiated to determine whether the administration of a single 5 ml/kg dose of a synthetic surfactant (Exosurf Neonatal), soon after the delivery of infants with birth weights 700 to 1350 gm, would improve rates of survival without bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Both trials were terminated before enrolling their planned sample sizes because of the availability of Exosurf under the provisions of a Treatment Investigational New Drug program. We report the combined results of these trials. Study infants were stratified according to birth weight and gender before random assignment to a treatment regimen. One hundred ninety-two infants received Exosurf and 193 received an air placebo. The study groups were similar when a variety of demographic features describing the mothers, their pregnancies, the circumstances of the births, and the infants were compared. Exosurf-treated infants required significantly less oxygen and respiratory support during the first 3 days of life in comparison with the air-treated infants. Fewer infants in the Exosurf group had pulmonary interstitial emphysema (26 vs 13; p = 0.028). In the Exosurf group, there was a significant reduction in the combined outcome, neonatal death or survival with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (57 vs 39; p = 0.042), and there was a significant increase in rates of survival without this disease (128 vs 137; p = 0.042). There were no differences between treatment groups in the incidences of a variety of complications of prematurity, including apnea, patent ductus arteriosus, intraventricular hemorrhage, and necrotizing enterocolitis. We conclude that improvements in respiratory physiology after a single prophylactic dose of Exosurf result in an increased likelihood of neonatal survival without bronchopulmonary dysplasia.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1992

Controlled trial of a single dose of synthetic surfactant at birth in premature infants weighing 500 to 699 grams

David Stevenson; Frans Walther; Walker Long; Sell M; Thomas H. Pauly; Alice Gong; David Easa; Arun Pramanik; Michael LeBlanc; Endla K Anday; Ramasubbareddy Dhanireddy; David J. Burchfield; Anthony Corbet

In a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 23 hospitals in the United States, a single prophylactic 5 ml/kg dose of a synthetic surfactant (Exosurf Neonatal) or air placebo was administered shortly after birth to 215 infants with birth weights of 500 to 699 gm. Despite stratification at entry by birth weight and gender, by chance female infants predominated in the air placebo group and male infants predominated in the surfactant group. Among infants receiving synthetic surfactant, improvements in oxygen requirements were significant at 2 hours after birth (p = 0.014) and persisted for 3 days (p = 0.001); improvements in the alveolar-arterial partial pressure of oxygen gradient were significant at 6 hours after birth (p = 0.01) and persisted for 3 days (p = 0.008). Improvements in mean airway pressure were not significant at 2 or at 6 hours after birth (p = 0.622 and 0.083, respectively), but became significant thereafter and persisted for 3 days (p = 0.002). Pneumothorax was reduced by slightly more than half (25 vs 11; p = 0.014); death from respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) was also reduced (26 vs 15; p = 0.046). Overall neonatal mortality, however, was not significantly reduced (58 vs 46; p = 0.102). Other complications of RDS and prematurity were not altered, except that pulmonary hemorrhage occurred significantly more frequently in infants receiving synthetic surfactant (2 vs 12; p = 0.006). These findings indicate that a single prophylactic dose of synthetic surfactant in infants weighing 500 to 699 gm at birth improves lung function, incidence of air leak, and death from RDS but not overall mortality. The only safety problem identified was an increase in pulmonary hemorrhage.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1992

Pulmonary hemorrhage in premature infants after treatment with synthetic surfactant: An autopsy evaluation

John van Houten; Walker Long; Martha D. Mullett; Neil N. Finer; Douglas P. Derleth; Brock McMurray; Abraham Peliowski; Dorothy Walker; Diane Wold; Koravangattu Sankaran; Anthony Corbet

In an across study analysis of five multicenter, placebo-controlled trials of the synthetic surfactant, Exosurf Neonatal in infants weighing at least 700 gm, the incidence of clinical pulmonary hemorrhage was 1.9% in treated infants and 1.0% in control infants. To investigate whether a similar increase was also present histologically at postmortem examination, a blinded retrospective review of all autopsy reports from infants dying during these five trials was conducted. Pulmonary hemorrhage was present in 55% of 159 infants undergoing autopsy; the incidence was not different in infants treated with surfactant or air placebo. Birth weight was inversely related to the incidence of pulmonary hemorrhage in both groups. Pulmonary pathologic findings significantly associated with pulmonary hemorrhage included pulmonary interstitial emphysema and necrotizing laryngotracheitis in both groups. In the surfactant group, patent ductus arteriosus, intraventricular hemorrhage, and pneumothorax were significantly more frequent among those who developed pulmonary hemorrhage. In contrast to clinical diagnosis, pathologic diagnosis of pulmonary hemorrhage at autopsy was not more common in infants treated with Exosurf Neonatal.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Double-blind, randomized trial of one versus three prophylactic doses of synthetic surfactant in 826 neonates weighing 700 to 1100 grams: Effects on mortality rate

Anthony Corbet; Jeffrey S. Gerdes; Walker Long; Emilio Avila; Asha Puri; Adam A. Rosenberg; Kathleen Edwards; Larry N. Cook

Abstract At 33 hospitals in the United States, a double-blind, randomized clinical trial was performed to compare one versus three prophylactic doses of synthetic surfactant in 700 to 1100 gm inborn infants. All 826 infants received an initial prophylactic dose of surfactant within 30 minutes of birth. Subsequently 410 infants received two doses of placebo (air) 12 and 24 hours later, and 416 infants received two additional doses of surfactant. By the age of 28 days, 70 infants who received one dose of surfactant and 40 infants who received three doses were dead, a 43% relative reduction in the mortality rate (30 fewer deaths; p = 0.002). By the age of 1 year after term, 87 infants who received one dose and 62 infants who received three doses were dead: a 29% relative reduction in the mortality rate (25 fewer deaths; p = 0.027). Infants who received three doses of surfactant required significantly less oxygen and less mean airway pressure for the first week of life. Necrotizing enterocolitis (9 vs 25 infants; p = 0.005), and use of high-frequency ventilation (13 vs 26 infants; p = 0.037); pancuronium (43 vs 62 infants; p = 0.045); and leukocyte transfusions (0 vs 4 infants; p = 0.042) were less frequent in the three-dose group, but air leak, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, intraventricular hemorrhage, patent ductus arteriosus, pulmonary hemorrhage, and infections were not different. These results indicate that physiologic findings, mortality rates, and probably morbidity rates are improved by two additional prophylactic doses of synthetic surfactant. (J PEDIATR 1995;126:969-78)


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Double-blind developmental evaluation at 1-year corrected age of 597 premature infants with birth weights from 500 to 1350 grams enrolled in three placebo-controlled trials of prophylactic synthetic surfactant

Anthony Corbet; Walker Long; Robert E. Schumacher; Jeffrey S. Gerdes; Robert B. Cotton

Infants enrolled in three clinical trials of prophylactic treatment for respiratory distress syndrome with a single dose of synthetic surfactant (Exosurf Neonatal) or air placebo were monitored through 1-year adjusted age. A total of 1046 infants with birth weights from 500 to 1350 gm were enrolled in the three trials; of the 735 infants who survived to 1 year of age, follow-up evaluations were completed for 597 (80%, air placebo group; 82%, synthetic surfactant group). Infants in the air placebo and synthetic surfactant treatment groups had no differences in general health, growth, or nerodevelopmental outcomes or impairments. These follow-up results at 1-year adjusted age for infants who received a single dose of synthetic surfactant indicate that a single dose of synthetic surfactant reduces mortality without increasing the absolute number or proportion of infants with impairments at 1 year of age.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Double-blind evaluation of developmental and health status to age 2 years of infants weighing 700 to 1350 grams treated prophylactically at birth with a single dose of synthetic surfactant or air placebo.

Ernest N. Kraybill; Carl Bose; Anthony Corbet; Jose Garcia-Prats; Diane Asbill; Kathleen Edwards; Walker Long

In a previously published article, we reported results of a two-center study of outcome to 28 days of 385 infants with birth weights from 700 to 1350 gm who were assigned randomly to receive a single 5 ml/kg intratracheal dose of either synthetic surfactant or air placebo. Infants treated with surfactant had a higher rate of survival to 28 days without bronchopulmonary dysplasia than did control subjects given an air placebo. The present study assessed survivors in early childhood to determine neurodevelopmental outcome and late morbidity. Two hundred fifty-eight surviving infants from both centers were evaluated at 1-year adjusted age; medical histories were obtained, standard physical and neurologic examinations were performed, and Bayley Scales of Infant Development were administered. Ophthalmologic examinations were performed at various times between 28 days and 1-year adjusted age. At 2-years adjusted age, 118 infants from one center were reevaluated with the same procedures and also had hearing and speech evaluations. Neither the 1-year assessment of the entire population nor the 2-year assessment of the one centers cohort revealed physical or neurodevelopmental differences between treatment groups. We conclude that administration of a single prophylactic dose of synthetic surfactant to premature infants with birth weights from 700 to 1350 grams results in improved survival rates to 28 days without bronchopulmonary dysplasia and is not associated with adverse health or neurodevelopmental effects at 1-year or 2-years adjusted age.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1992

Retrospective search for bleeding diathesis among premature newborn infants with pulmonary hemorrhage after synthetic surfactant treatment

Walker Long; Anthony Corbet; Alexander C. Allen; Douglas McMillan; Steven Boros; Ross Vaughan; Jeffrey S. Gerdes; Linda Houle; Kathleen Edwards; David Schiff

In an across study analysis of five multicenter, placebo-controlled trials of the synthetic surfactant, Exosurf Neonatal, involving infants with birth weights 700 gm or greater the incidence of clinical pulmonary hemorrhage was 1.9% in treated infants and 1.0% in control infants. To determine whether this apparent increase in pulmonary hemorrhage was the result of a bleeding diathesis, we retrospectively reviewed charts for 39 of 41 infants with clinical pulmonary hemorrhage. The incidence of nonpulmonary bleeding was the same in control- and surfactant-treated infants. Platelet counts, hematocrit values, and the number of transfusions with platelets or red blood cells did not differ between the two groups. There was no evidence that surfactant treatment was specifically associated with a generalized bleeding diathesis.


Pediatric Research | 1984

DEVELOPMENT OF SYMPATHETIC REGULATION OF PHOSPHOLIPID SECRETION IN FETAL RABBIT LUNG

Anthony Corbet; Harold W Kolni; Therese Perreault; Julia Frink; Jack Rudolph

42 litters of newborn rabbits were killed and a tracheostomy tube inserted. All pups had 8 saline lavages, but alternate pups had 10−3 molar propranolol added. Samples were analysed for phospholipid (mg/g dry lung wt) as a reflection of lavage-induced secretion. Some litters then had 6 lavages after 3 or 15 minutes, followed by a further 6 lavages after total interval of 18 minutes. The phospholipid yield after 15 minutes was used to calculate the basal secretion index (SI). Other litters had constant air inflation and were again lavaged to calculate post-inflation secretion. Results expressed as mean ± standard error; C = saline controls; P = propranolol treated.At 29.5 d, but not at 27.5 d, propranolol inhibited basal, lavage-induced and inflation-stimulated secretion. At 2.5 d post-term secretion was greatly increased, but propranolol inhibition was still detected. Present data suggest that sympathetic regulation develops near term in the rabbit and persists after birth.

Collaboration


Dive into the Anthony Corbet's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Walker Long

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arnold J. Rudolph

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey S. Gerdes

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carl Bose

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Diane Wold

Research Triangle Park

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gennie Bose

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James M. Adams

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge