Evidence for uteroplacental malperfusion in fetuses with major congenital heart defects

2020-2-5
Binder, Julia
Carta, Silvia
Carvalho, Julene S.
Kalafat, Erkan
Khalil, Asma
Thilaganathan, Basky
Aims Fetuses affected by congenital heart defects (CHD) are considered to be at increased risk of fetal growth restriction and intrauterine demise. Whether these risks are a direct consequence of fetal CHD or a result of associated uteroplacental dysfunction is not evident from the data of recent studies. The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of uteroplacental dysfunction reflected by abnormal uterine artery Doppler indices and reduced fetal growth in CHD pregnancies. Methods This is a retrospective case-control study including singleton pregnancies referred for detailed fetal cardiac assessment subsequently diagnosed with or without CHD. Mid-trimester uterine artery Doppler assessment at 20-24 weeks as well as third trimester fetal biometry and arterial Doppler pulsatility indices (PI) were performed. All fetal biometry were converted into centiles and Doppler values to multiples of median (MoM) to adjust for physiological changes with gestation. Results The study included 811 pregnancies including 153 cases where the fetus was diagnosed with CHD. Mid-pregnancy uterine artery PI was significantly higher in women with fetal CHD compared to controls (0.90MoM vs 0.83MoM; p = 0.006). In the third trimester, median centiles for fetal head circumference (45.4 vs 57.07; p<0.001), abdominal circumference (51.17 vs 55.71; p = 0.014), estimated fetal weight (33.6 vs 56.7; p<0.001) and cerebroplacental ratio (CPR: 0.84MoM vs 0.95MoM; p<0.001) were significantly lower in fetuses with CHD compared to controls. The percentage of small for gestational age births < 10th centile (24.0% vs 10.7%; < 0.001) and low CPR < 0.6MoM (11.7% vs 2.5%; p<0.001) were significantly higher in the fetal CHD cohort. Conclusions Mid-pregnancy uterine artery resistance is increased and subsequent fetal biometry reduced in pregnancies with CHD fetuses. These findings suggest that fetal CHD are associated with uteroplacental dysfunction, secondary to impaired maternal uteroplacental perfusion resulting in relative fetal hypoxaemia and reduced fetal growth.

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Citation Formats
J. Binder, S. Carta, J. S. Carvalho, E. Kalafat, A. Khalil, and B. Thilaganathan, “Evidence for uteroplacental malperfusion in fetuses with major congenital heart defects,” PLOS ONE, 2020, Accessed: 00, 2020. [Online]. Available: https://hdl.handle.net/11511/51562.