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Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi

BACKGROUND: Malaria during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk for low birth weight (<2500 grams). Distinguishing infants that are born premature (< 37 weeks) from those that are growth-restricted (less than the 10th percentile at birth) requires accurate assessment of gestational a...

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Autores principales: Wylie, Blair J, Kalilani-Phiri, Linda, Madanitsa, Mwayi, Membe, Gladys, Nyirenda, Osward, Mawindo, Patricia, Kuyenda, Redson, Malenga, Albert, Masonbrink, Abbey, Makanani, Bonus, Thesing, Phillip, Laufer, Miriam K
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3679840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23734718
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-12-183
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author Wylie, Blair J
Kalilani-Phiri, Linda
Madanitsa, Mwayi
Membe, Gladys
Nyirenda, Osward
Mawindo, Patricia
Kuyenda, Redson
Malenga, Albert
Masonbrink, Abbey
Makanani, Bonus
Thesing, Phillip
Laufer, Miriam K
author_facet Wylie, Blair J
Kalilani-Phiri, Linda
Madanitsa, Mwayi
Membe, Gladys
Nyirenda, Osward
Mawindo, Patricia
Kuyenda, Redson
Malenga, Albert
Masonbrink, Abbey
Makanani, Bonus
Thesing, Phillip
Laufer, Miriam K
author_sort Wylie, Blair J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Malaria during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk for low birth weight (<2500 grams). Distinguishing infants that are born premature (< 37 weeks) from those that are growth-restricted (less than the 10th percentile at birth) requires accurate assessment of gestational age. Where ultrasound is accessible, sonographic confirmation of gestational age is more accurate than menstrual dating. The goal was to pilot the feasibility and utility of adding ultrasound to an observational pregnancy malaria cohort. METHODS: In July 2009, research staff (three mid-level clinical providers, one nurse) from The Blantyre Malaria Project underwent an intensive one-week ultrasound training to perform foetal biometry. Following an additional four months of practice and remote image review, subjects from an ongoing cohort were recruited for ultrasound to determine gestational age. Gestational age at delivery established by ultrasound was compared with postnatal gestational age assessment (Ballard examination). RESULTS: One hundred and seventy-eight women were enrolled. The majority of images were of good quality (94.3%, 509/540) although a learning curve was apparent with 17.5% (24/135) images of unacceptable quality in the first 25% of scans. Ultrasound was used to date 13% of the pregnancies when menstrual dates were unknown and changed the estimated gestational age for an additional 25%. There was poor agreement between the gestational age at delivery as established by the ultrasound protocol compared to that determined by the Ballard examination (bias 0.8 weeks, limits of agreement -3.5 weeks to 5.1 weeks). The distribution of gestational ages by Ballard suggested a clustering of gestational age around the mean with 87% of the values falling between 39 and 41 weeks. The distribution of gestational age by ultrasound confirmed menstrual dates was more typical. Using ultrasound confirmed dates as the gold standard, 78.5% of preterm infants were misclassified as term and 26.8% of small-for gestational age infants misclassified as appropriately grown by Ballard. CONCLUSION: Ultrasound should be strongly considered in prospective malaria studies with obstetric endpoints to confirm gestational age and avoid misclassification of infants as premature or growth-restricted. The use of ultrasound does require a significant investment of time to maintain quality image acquisition.
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spelling pubmed-36798402013-06-13 Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi Wylie, Blair J Kalilani-Phiri, Linda Madanitsa, Mwayi Membe, Gladys Nyirenda, Osward Mawindo, Patricia Kuyenda, Redson Malenga, Albert Masonbrink, Abbey Makanani, Bonus Thesing, Phillip Laufer, Miriam K Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Malaria during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk for low birth weight (<2500 grams). Distinguishing infants that are born premature (< 37 weeks) from those that are growth-restricted (less than the 10th percentile at birth) requires accurate assessment of gestational age. Where ultrasound is accessible, sonographic confirmation of gestational age is more accurate than menstrual dating. The goal was to pilot the feasibility and utility of adding ultrasound to an observational pregnancy malaria cohort. METHODS: In July 2009, research staff (three mid-level clinical providers, one nurse) from The Blantyre Malaria Project underwent an intensive one-week ultrasound training to perform foetal biometry. Following an additional four months of practice and remote image review, subjects from an ongoing cohort were recruited for ultrasound to determine gestational age. Gestational age at delivery established by ultrasound was compared with postnatal gestational age assessment (Ballard examination). RESULTS: One hundred and seventy-eight women were enrolled. The majority of images were of good quality (94.3%, 509/540) although a learning curve was apparent with 17.5% (24/135) images of unacceptable quality in the first 25% of scans. Ultrasound was used to date 13% of the pregnancies when menstrual dates were unknown and changed the estimated gestational age for an additional 25%. There was poor agreement between the gestational age at delivery as established by the ultrasound protocol compared to that determined by the Ballard examination (bias 0.8 weeks, limits of agreement -3.5 weeks to 5.1 weeks). The distribution of gestational ages by Ballard suggested a clustering of gestational age around the mean with 87% of the values falling between 39 and 41 weeks. The distribution of gestational age by ultrasound confirmed menstrual dates was more typical. Using ultrasound confirmed dates as the gold standard, 78.5% of preterm infants were misclassified as term and 26.8% of small-for gestational age infants misclassified as appropriately grown by Ballard. CONCLUSION: Ultrasound should be strongly considered in prospective malaria studies with obstetric endpoints to confirm gestational age and avoid misclassification of infants as premature or growth-restricted. The use of ultrasound does require a significant investment of time to maintain quality image acquisition. BioMed Central 2013-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3679840/ /pubmed/23734718 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-12-183 Text en Copyright © 2013 Wylie et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Wylie, Blair J
Kalilani-Phiri, Linda
Madanitsa, Mwayi
Membe, Gladys
Nyirenda, Osward
Mawindo, Patricia
Kuyenda, Redson
Malenga, Albert
Masonbrink, Abbey
Makanani, Bonus
Thesing, Phillip
Laufer, Miriam K
Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi
title Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi
title_full Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi
title_fullStr Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi
title_short Gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in Malawi
title_sort gestational age assessment in malaria pregnancy cohorts: a prospective ultrasound demonstration project in malawi
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3679840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23734718
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-12-183
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