The Heart of the Matter: Pharmacologic Management of Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA) in Preterm Infants

The Heart of the Matter: Pharmacologic Management of Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA) in Preterm Infants

The ductus arteriosus is a vessel that connects the pulmonary artery and the aorta in fetal circulation, but closes within 72 hours of birth in most full-term infants. In pre-term infants the ductus arteriosus may remain open, resulting in pulmonary and cardiac complications as well as decreased end-organ perfusion. Symptomatic patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) may be treated pharmacologically with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or acetaminophen. Different drugs, routes of administration, timing of therapy initiation, and dosing regimens have been studied and used in practice. Pharmacists should be familiar with the data supporting different pharmacologic treatment options for PDA as well as risks and benefits of various regimens.

This activity is a recording from a live webinar (on 10/22/2024) and those that claim credit for the live webinar should not claim credit for this activity.

CE Credit: 0.5 Contact Hours
Universal Activity Number (UAN): 0025-0000-24-076-L01-P
Activity Type: Application
Launch Date: 10/22/2024
Expiration Date: 10/22/2025
Course Number: HTIP_2024_10_22_Rohatgi
Target Audience: Pharmacists
Course Details (Activity Announcement): View File HTIP_2024_10_22_Rohatgi Activity Announcement)

Presenter:
Simran Rohatgi, PharmD
PGY-2 Pediatric Pharmacy Resident
University of Maryland

Dr. Rohatgi, faculty for this activity, has no financial relationship(s) to disclose. None of the planners for this activity have financial relationships to disclose

 

ACPE LogoThe University of Maryland School of Pharmacy is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education.

 
 

Learning Objectives
At the end of this activity, the  participant should be able to:

  1. Interpret evidence related to the use of acetaminophen, ibuprofen, and indomethacin for the treatment of patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) in preterm infants.
  2. Based on existing literature and patient characteristics, select an optimal acetaminophen- or NSAID-based regimen for a preterm infant with PDA

Instructor

Simran Rohatgi, PharmD
PGY-2 Pediatric Pharmacy Resident
University of Maryland

Dr. Rohatgi, faculty for this activity, has no financial relationship(s) to disclose. None of the planners for this activity have financial relationships to disclose

Technology Requirements

Unless otherwise noted in the course materials, the following are required to access online courses: A computer or mobile device with a stable internet connection and the ability to view and update Microsoft Word® and PowerPoint® documents.  

Supported Internet Browsers

Windows

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  • Chrome 43 and above
  • Firefox 4.0 (or later)

MacOS

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  • Chrome 43 and above
Minimum Memory 8 GB (or more)
Minimum Storage 6 GB (or more)
Minimum Processor PC: 2 GHz or faster Intel processor
MacOS: Multi-core Intel processor
Minimum Internet Speeds High speed internet connection
Other Participants must be able to play audio (either through speakers or headphones) as well as ability to open PDF files and view and edit Word, and PPT documents.

Successful completion requires the participant to complete all activity components including the audiovisual presentations, active leanring, and activity evaluation. Learners must complete the activity evaluation in order to receive CE credit.  A link to the activity evaluation will be available once a learner has successfully completed all other course segments.

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