Appropriate Delivery Timing in Fetuses with Fetal Growth Restriction to Reduce Neonatal Complications: A Case-Control Study in Romania.
Daniela-Loredana BujorescuAdrian RatiuCosmin CîtuFlorin GorunOana-Maria GorunDoru Ciprian CrisanAlina-Ramona CozlacIoana Chiorean-CojocaruMihaela TunescuZoran Laurentiu PopaRoxana FolescuAndrei Gheorghe Marius MotocPublished in: Journal of personalized medicine (2023)
(1) Background: The main challenge in cases of early onset fetal growth restriction is management (i.e., timing of delivery), trying to determine the optimal balance between the opposing risks of stillbirth and prematurity. The aim of this study is to determine the likelihood of neonatal complications depending on the time of birth based on Doppler parameters in fetuses with early onset fetal growth restriction; (2) Methods: A case-control study of 205 consecutive pregnant women diagnosed with early onset FGR was conducted at the Obstetrics Clinic of the Municipal Emergency Hospital in Timisoara, Romania; The case group included newborns who were delivered at the onset of umbilical arteries absent/reversed end-diastolic flow, and the control included infants delivered at the onset of reversed/absent ductus venosus A-wave. (3) Results: The overall neonatal mortality rate was 2.0%, and there was no significant statistical difference between the two study groups. In infants delivered up to 30 gestational weeks, grades III/IV intraventricular hemorrhage and bronchopulmonary dysplasia were statistically significantly more frequent in the control group. Moreover, univariate binomial logistic regression analysis on fetuses born under 30 gestational weeks shows that those included in the control group are 30 times more likely to develop bronchopulmonary dysplasia and 14 times more likely to develop intraventricular hemorrhage grades III/IV; (4) Conclusions: Infants delivered according to the occurrence of umbilical arteries absent/reversed end-diastolic flow are less likely to develop intraventricular hemorrhage grades III/IV and bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
Keyphrases
- early onset
- gestational age
- pregnant women
- birth weight
- late onset
- preterm birth
- weight gain
- left ventricular
- low birth weight
- blood pressure
- risk factors
- pregnancy outcomes
- healthcare
- heart failure
- preterm infants
- public health
- wastewater treatment
- emergency department
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- body mass index
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular events
- physical activity
- electronic health record