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Preemie fracture rates dropped by 4.8 X after medical staff told to increase Vitamin D by 400 IU, etc. – July 2024


A Quality Improvement Project to Decrease Fractures Secondary to Metabolic Bone Disease of Prematurity

Pediatr Qual Saf. 2024 Jul 29;9(4):e750. doi: 10.1097/pq9.0000000000000750. eCollection 2024 Jul-Aug.
Nicole M Rau 1, Lisa J Monagle 2, Ashley M Fischer 1

Introduction: Osteopenia of prematurity is common in the neonatal intensive care unit, with an incidence of up to 54% in extremely low birthweight infants. The baseline fracture rate in our level IV midwestern neonatal intensive care unit was 13%, with poor compliance with recommended intakes of calcium, calcium:phosphorus ratio, and Vitamin D.

Methods: A multidisciplinary team implemented a screening guideline through four Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles, which addressed staff education, vitamin D screening, and incorporation of calcitriol. In total, 150 patients born between October 1, 2019 and April 30, 2023 were screened for mineral intakes, laboratory abnormalities, and the development of fractures or osteopenia.

Results: The incidence of fractures decreased from 13% to 5.3%. Compliance with mineral intakes improved for calcium, calcium: phosphorus ratio, and Vitamin D. Infants born after the guideline were 4.8 times less likely to develop fractures.

Conclusion: Quality improvement methodology successfully decreased the rate of fractures due to osteopenia of prematurity and increased compliance with recommended mineral intakes.


Even fewer fractures if gave 800 IU to preemie

Giving 6,000 IU daily during pregnancy would reduce preemies by 4 X AND lower factures