Prenatal diagnosis and prevalence of critical congenital heart defects: an international retrospective cohort study.
Marian Karolien BakkerJorieke E H BergmanSergey KrikovEmmanuelle AmarGuido CocchiJanet CraganHermien E K de WalleMiriam GattBoris GroismanShiliang LiuWendy N NembhardAnna PieriniAnke RissmannShanthi ChidambarathanuAntonin SipekElena SzabovaGiovanna TagliabueDavid TuckerPierpaolo MastroiacovoLorenzo D BottoPublished in: BMJ open (2019)
Prenatal detection already accounts for 50% or more of CCHD detected in many programmes and is increasing. Local policies and access likely account for the wide variability of reported occurrence and prenatal diagnosis. Detection rates are high especially for CCHD that are more easily diagnosed on a standard obstetric four-chamber ultrasound or for fetuses that have extracardiac anomalies. These ongoing trends in prenatal diagnosis, potentially in combination with newborn pulse oximetry, are likely to modify the epidemiology and clinical outcomes of CCHD in the near future.