Etiology of apneic episodes in infants aged <1 year and validation of brief resolved unexplained events risk-stratification criteria without age as a risk factor
(2026) In Frontiers in Pediatrics 14. p.1-7- Abstract
- The criteria for Brief Resolved Unexplained Events (BRUE) are used to stratify the risk in infants presenting with apneic episodes. However, these criteria often classify a high proportion of infants as higher risk. This study aimed to investigate the etiology of apneic episodes, particularly those compatible with BRUE, and to assess whether age ≤60 days is associated with serious underlying conditions. We conducted a retrospective study of infants aged <1 year who presented with apnea as the chief complaint or had an ICD-10 code P28.4 (Other apnea of newborn) recorded between 2014 and 2018 at Skåne Pediatric University Hospital. The cohort was divided into a BRUE subgroup, which was further stratified into lower- and higher-risk groups... (More)
- The criteria for Brief Resolved Unexplained Events (BRUE) are used to stratify the risk in infants presenting with apneic episodes. However, these criteria often classify a high proportion of infants as higher risk. This study aimed to investigate the etiology of apneic episodes, particularly those compatible with BRUE, and to assess whether age ≤60 days is associated with serious underlying conditions. We conducted a retrospective study of infants aged <1 year who presented with apnea as the chief complaint or had an ICD-10 code P28.4 (Other apnea of newborn) recorded between 2014 and 2018 at Skåne Pediatric University Hospital. The cohort was divided into a BRUE subgroup, which was further stratified into lower- and higher-risk groups based on current BRUE criteria, and additionally stratified without considering age as a higher-risk factor. Infants with an ICD diagnosis related to respiratory tract infection (RTI) or clinical signs of RTI were categorized into a separate RTI sub-cohort. A total of 340 infants were included. No specific diagnosis was identified in 253 (74.4%) cases, while 63 (18.5%) were diagnosed with viral RTIs. There were 9 (2.6%) cases with serious conditions during the first encounter, all of whom appeared unwell or had alarming signs at presentation excluding them from a BRUE diagnosis. The BRUE sub-cohort included 188 infants, of whom 143 (76.1%) were classified as higher risk using current criteria. When age ≤60 days was excluded as a risk factor, only 45 (23.9%) were classified as higher risk. None of the infants with serious diagnoses were misclassified as lower risk under the modified criteria. The RTI sub-cohort included 158 infants, with 111 (70.3%) hospitalized; 90 of these (81.1%) were discharged within two days. Serious underlying conditions and complicated clinical courses were rare among well-appearing infants aged under 1 year, with apneic episodes. Age ≤60 days did not appear to be associated with serious diagnoses in the BRUE sub-cohort. Well-appearing infants with RTI symptoms also had benign outcomes. These findings suggest that age may warrant re-evaluation as a risk factor in BRUE stratification, and that well-appearing infants with RTI symptoms may be appropriately classified as low risk. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/bcb78e4b-8c6e-4c4c-9364-aaad58742de8
- author
- Hellström Schmidt, Sanna
LU
; Sotoca Fernandez, Jorge
LU
; Pronk, Cornelis Jan
LU
and Orfanos, Ioannis
LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2026-02-11
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Frontiers in Pediatrics
- volume
- 14
- article number
- 1731324
- pages
- 1 - 7
- publisher
- Frontiers Media S. A.
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:105031102582
- ISSN
- 2296-2360
- DOI
- 10.3389/fped.2026.1731324
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- bcb78e4b-8c6e-4c4c-9364-aaad58742de8
- date added to LUP
- 2026-03-02 20:25:45
- date last changed
- 2026-03-03 07:50:35
@article{bcb78e4b-8c6e-4c4c-9364-aaad58742de8,
abstract = {{The criteria for Brief Resolved Unexplained Events (BRUE) are used to stratify the risk in infants presenting with apneic episodes. However, these criteria often classify a high proportion of infants as higher risk. This study aimed to investigate the etiology of apneic episodes, particularly those compatible with BRUE, and to assess whether age ≤60 days is associated with serious underlying conditions. We conducted a retrospective study of infants aged <1 year who presented with apnea as the chief complaint or had an ICD-10 code P28.4 (Other apnea of newborn) recorded between 2014 and 2018 at Skåne Pediatric University Hospital. The cohort was divided into a BRUE subgroup, which was further stratified into lower- and higher-risk groups based on current BRUE criteria, and additionally stratified without considering age as a higher-risk factor. Infants with an ICD diagnosis related to respiratory tract infection (RTI) or clinical signs of RTI were categorized into a separate RTI sub-cohort. A total of 340 infants were included. No specific diagnosis was identified in 253 (74.4%) cases, while 63 (18.5%) were diagnosed with viral RTIs. There were 9 (2.6%) cases with serious conditions during the first encounter, all of whom appeared unwell or had alarming signs at presentation excluding them from a BRUE diagnosis. The BRUE sub-cohort included 188 infants, of whom 143 (76.1%) were classified as higher risk using current criteria. When age ≤60 days was excluded as a risk factor, only 45 (23.9%) were classified as higher risk. None of the infants with serious diagnoses were misclassified as lower risk under the modified criteria. The RTI sub-cohort included 158 infants, with 111 (70.3%) hospitalized; 90 of these (81.1%) were discharged within two days. Serious underlying conditions and complicated clinical courses were rare among well-appearing infants aged under 1 year, with apneic episodes. Age ≤60 days did not appear to be associated with serious diagnoses in the BRUE sub-cohort. Well-appearing infants with RTI symptoms also had benign outcomes. These findings suggest that age may warrant re-evaluation as a risk factor in BRUE stratification, and that well-appearing infants with RTI symptoms may be appropriately classified as low risk.}},
author = {{Hellström Schmidt, Sanna and Sotoca Fernandez, Jorge and Pronk, Cornelis Jan and Orfanos, Ioannis}},
issn = {{2296-2360}},
language = {{eng}},
month = {{02}},
pages = {{1--7}},
publisher = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
series = {{Frontiers in Pediatrics}},
title = {{Etiology of apneic episodes in infants aged <1 year and validation of brief resolved unexplained events risk-stratification criteria without age as a risk factor}},
url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2026.1731324}},
doi = {{10.3389/fped.2026.1731324}},
volume = {{14}},
year = {{2026}},
}