Authors
Fahad Amin, Rija Fatima, Saira Iqbal, Abdul Rehman Azam, Tehreem Talab, Taimoor Hassan, Esha Naeem, Muhammad Talha, Mashal Zahid, Hurain Naeem
Published in
European journal of pediatrics. Volume 185. Issue 8. Jul 10, 2026. Epub Jul 10, 2026.
Abstract
Phototherapy is the mainstay treatment for neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, but the optimal delivery strategy remains debated. Intermittent phototherapy (IMPT) has been proposed as an alternative to continuous phototherapy (CPT) that may achieve comparable bilirubin reduction with fewer adverse effects. This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the comparative efficacy and safety of IMPT versus CPT in neonates with hyperbilirubinemia. PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Cochrane Library, and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched through June 2026 for randomized controlled trials comparing IMPT and CPT. Outcomes included rate of fall in bilirubin, follow-up bilirubin, phototherapy duration, hospital stay, and mortality. Random-effects meta-analysis pooled mean differences (MD) and risk ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Subgroup, meta-regression, and Trial Sequential Analysis (TSA) were performed, and certainty of evidence was graded using GRADE. Twenty-six RCTs (3,891 neonates) were included. No significant difference was found between IMPT and CPT for rate of bilirubin fall, follow-up bilirubin, hospital stay, or mortality. IMPT significantly reduced phototherapy duration (MD - 10.40 h, 95% CI - 18.91 to - 1.88). Heterogeneity was substantial across outcomes. TSA indicated conclusive evidence of equivalence for bilirubin-related and hospital stay outcomes, while evidence for the duration reduction had not yet reached the required information size. Certainty of evidence ranged from low to very low.
IMPT achieves outcomes comparable to CPT while significantly reducing treatment duration, supporting its use as a time-efficient alternative, though findings warrant cautious interpretation given low certainty of evidence.
• IMPT and CPT show comparable bilirubin reduction, but prior comparisons relied on limited trials without assessing whether the evidence base is conclusive.
• This review incorporates the latest trials, applies Cochrane-guided meta-regression, subgroup, leave-one-out, and Hartung-Knapp sensitivity analyses, and uses TSA to confirm conclusive equivalence across major outcomes.
PMID:
42429837
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 10 Jul 2026.
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