Single and Serial Fetal Biometry to Detect Preterm and Term Small- and Large-for-Gestational-Age Neonates: A Longitudinal Cohort Study.
Adi Laurentiu TarcaEdgar Hernandez-AndradeHyunyoung AhnMaynor GarciaZhonghui XuSteven J KorzeniewskiHomam SakerTinnakorn ChaiworapongsaSonia S HassanLami YeoRoberto RomeroPublished in: PloS one (2016)
When growth abnormalities are defined based on birth weight, growth velocity (captured in the longitudinal analysis) does not provide additional information when compared to the last measurement for predicting SGA and LGA neonates, with both approaches detecting one-half of the neonates (FPR = 10%) from data collected at ≤32 weeks. Unlike for SGA, LGA detection can be improved if ultrasound scans are scheduled as close as possible to the gestational-age cutoff when a decision regarding the clinical management of the patient needs to be made. Screening performance for SGA is higher for neonates that will be delivered preterm.