# Outcomes in Early Adulthood for Individuals Born Very Preterm and/or with Very Low Birth Weight: Evidence from Multinational Cohorts

**Authors:** Hanifa Pilvar, Catia Nicodemo, Stavros Petrou, Brian A. Darlow, Paula van Dommelen, Kari Anne I Evensen, Sarah Harris, John Horwood, Karen Mathewson, Saroj Saigal, Louis Schmidt, Dieter Wolke, Lianne J. Woodward, Sungwook Kim

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jpedcp.2025.200196 · 2025-12-01

## TL;DR

Individuals born very preterm or with very low birth weight face higher mortality and educational challenges in early adulthood compared to those born at term.

## Contribution

This study provides multinational evidence on long-term outcomes of very preterm or very low birth weight individuals into early adulthood.

## Key findings

- VP/VLBW individuals had 16.7 percentage points higher mortality before adulthood compared to term-born controls.
- VP/VLBW survivors were more likely to attain less than secondary education.
- Each additional week of gestational age reduced mortality by 6.8 percentage points within the VP/VLBW group.

## Abstract

Advances in neonatal care have improved survival rates for infants born very preterm (VP) and/or with very low birth weight (VLBW), yet their long-term outcomes into adulthood remain understudied.

To assess the impact of VP/VLBW status on mortality, educational attainment, and labor market outcomes in early adulthood using data from the RECAP Preterm Project.

We used harmonized data from 5 nationally representative cohort studies in high-income countries (Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Norway) participating in the RECAP Preterm Project. Our sample included 2493 individuals born VP/VLBW and 496 control patients born at term. We used coarsened exact matching to compare adult outcomes between infants who were VP/VLBW and those born at term and an instrumental variable approach—using maternal nulliparity—to estimate the marginal effect of gestational age within the VP/VLBW group.

Mortality before adulthood was 16.7 percentage points greater among individuals who were VP/VLBW compared with control infants born at term (95% CI 13.2-20.2). Among survivors, the likelihood of attaining less than secondary education was 4.3 percentage points greater (95% CI −0.8 to 9.4). Differences in economic activity and working hours were small and uncertain. Within the VP/VLBW group, each additional week of gestational age was associated with a 6.8 percentage point reduction in mortality (95% CI −12.7 to −1.0), with weaker associations for educational and labor market outcomes.

VP/VLBW birth is associated with elevated mortality and educational disadvantage in early adulthood. These findings highlight the importance of long-term support for this population beyond neonatal survival, particularly in education and development policy.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12810559