Predictors of neonatal outcome in early-onset placental dysfunction.

  • Ahmet Baschat
  • Erich Cosmi
  • Catarina M Bilardo
  • Hans Wolf
  • Christoph Berg
  • Serena Rigano
  • Ute Germer
  • Dolores Moyano
  • Sifa Turan
  • John Hartung
  • Amarnath Bhide
  • Thomas Müller
  • Sarah Bower
  • Kypros H Nicolaides
  • Baskaran Thilaganathan
  • Ulrich Gembruch
  • Enrico Ferrazzi
  • Kurt Hecher
  • Henry L Galan
  • Chris R Harman

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify specific estimates and predictors of neonatal morbidity and mortality in early onset fetal growth restriction due to placental dysfunction. METHODS: Prospective multicenter study of prenatally diagnosed growth-restricted liveborn neonates of less than 33 weeks of gestational age. Relationships between perinatal variables (arterial and venous Dopplers, gestational age, birth weight, acid-base status, and Apgar scores) and major neonatal complications, neonatal death, and intact survival were analyzed by logistic regression. Predictive cutoffs were determined by receiver operating characteristic curves. RESULTS: Major morbidity occurred in 35.9% of 604 neonates: bronchopulmonary dysplasia in 23.2% (n=140), intraventricular hemorrhage in 15.2% (n=92), and necrotizing enterocolitis in 12.4% (n=75). Total mortality was 21.5 % (n=130), and 58.3% survived without complication (n=352). From 24 to 32 weeks, major morbidity declined (56.6% to 10.5%), coinciding with survival that exceeded 50% after 26 weeks. Gestational age was the most significant determinant (P

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
ISSN0029-7844
Publication statusPublished - 2007
pubmed 17267821