Cargando…

Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project

BACKGROUND: Human growth is susceptible to damage from insults, particularly during periods of rapid growth. Identifying those periods and the normative limits that are compatible with adequate growth and development are the first key steps toward preventing impaired growth. OBJECTIVE: This study ai...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ohuma, Eric O., Villar, José, Feng, Yuan, Xiao, Luo, Salomon, Laurent, Barros, Fernando C., Cheikh Ismail, Leila, Stones, William, Jaffer, Yasmin, Oberto, Manuela, Noble, J. Alison, Gravett, Michael G., Wu, Qingqing, Victora, Cesar G., Lambert, Ann, Di Nicola, Paola, Purwar, Manorama, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A., Kennedy, Stephen H., Papageorghiou, Aris T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7858163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32768431
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2020.07.054
_version_ 1783646597945491456
author Ohuma, Eric O.
Villar, José
Feng, Yuan
Xiao, Luo
Salomon, Laurent
Barros, Fernando C.
Cheikh Ismail, Leila
Stones, William
Jaffer, Yasmin
Oberto, Manuela
Noble, J. Alison
Gravett, Michael G.
Wu, Qingqing
Victora, Cesar G.
Lambert, Ann
Di Nicola, Paola
Purwar, Manorama
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
Kennedy, Stephen H.
Papageorghiou, Aris T.
author_facet Ohuma, Eric O.
Villar, José
Feng, Yuan
Xiao, Luo
Salomon, Laurent
Barros, Fernando C.
Cheikh Ismail, Leila
Stones, William
Jaffer, Yasmin
Oberto, Manuela
Noble, J. Alison
Gravett, Michael G.
Wu, Qingqing
Victora, Cesar G.
Lambert, Ann
Di Nicola, Paola
Purwar, Manorama
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
Kennedy, Stephen H.
Papageorghiou, Aris T.
author_sort Ohuma, Eric O.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Human growth is susceptible to damage from insults, particularly during periods of rapid growth. Identifying those periods and the normative limits that are compatible with adequate growth and development are the first key steps toward preventing impaired growth. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to construct international fetal growth velocity increment and conditional velocity standards from 14 to 40 weeks’ gestation based on the same cohort that contributed to the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Fetal Growth Standards. STUDY DESIGN: This study was a prospective, longitudinal study of 4321 low-risk pregnancies from 8 geographically diverse populations in the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project with rigorous standardization of all study procedures, equipment, and measurements that were performed by trained ultrasonographers. Gestational age was accurately determined clinically and confirmed by ultrasound measurement of crown-rump length at <14 weeks’ gestation. Thereafter, the ultrasonographers, who were masked to the values, measured the fetal head circumference, biparietal diameter, occipitofrontal diameter, abdominal circumference, and femur length in triplicate every 5 weeks (within 1 week either side) using identical ultrasound equipment at each site (4–7 scans per pregnancy). Velocity increments across a range of intervals between measures were modeled using fractional polynomial regression. RESULTS: Peak velocity was observed at a similar gestational age: 16 and 17 weeks’ gestation for head circumference (12.2 mm/wk), and 16 weeks’ gestation for abdominal circumference (11.8 mm/wk) and femur length (3.2 mm/wk). However, velocity growth slowed down rapidly for head circumference, biparietal diameter, occipitofrontal diameter, and femur length, with an almost linear reduction toward term that was more marked for femur length. Conversely, abdominal circumference velocity remained relatively steady throughout pregnancy. The change in velocity with gestational age was more evident for head circumference, biparietal diameter, occipitofrontal diameter, and femur length than for abdominal circumference when the change was expressed as a percentage of fetal size at 40 weeks’ gestation. We have also shown how to obtain accurate conditional fetal velocity based on our previous methodological work. CONCLUSION: The fetal skeleton and abdomen have different velocity growth patterns during intrauterine life. Accordingly, we have produced international Fetal Growth Velocity Increment Standards to complement the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Fetal Growth Standards so as to monitor fetal well-being comprehensively worldwide. Fetal growth velocity curves may be valuable if one wants to study the pathophysiology of fetal growth. We provide an application that can be used easily in clinical practice to evaluate changes in fetal size as conditional velocity for a more refined assessment of fetal growth than is possible at present (https://lxiao5.shinyapps.io/fetal_growth/). The application is freely available with the other INTERGROWTH-21(st) tools at https://intergrowth21.tghn.org/standards-tools/.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7858163
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-78581632021-02-05 Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project Ohuma, Eric O. Villar, José Feng, Yuan Xiao, Luo Salomon, Laurent Barros, Fernando C. Cheikh Ismail, Leila Stones, William Jaffer, Yasmin Oberto, Manuela Noble, J. Alison Gravett, Michael G. Wu, Qingqing Victora, Cesar G. Lambert, Ann Di Nicola, Paola Purwar, Manorama Bhutta, Zulfiqar A. Kennedy, Stephen H. Papageorghiou, Aris T. Am J Obstet Gynecol Original Research BACKGROUND: Human growth is susceptible to damage from insults, particularly during periods of rapid growth. Identifying those periods and the normative limits that are compatible with adequate growth and development are the first key steps toward preventing impaired growth. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to construct international fetal growth velocity increment and conditional velocity standards from 14 to 40 weeks’ gestation based on the same cohort that contributed to the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Fetal Growth Standards. STUDY DESIGN: This study was a prospective, longitudinal study of 4321 low-risk pregnancies from 8 geographically diverse populations in the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project with rigorous standardization of all study procedures, equipment, and measurements that were performed by trained ultrasonographers. Gestational age was accurately determined clinically and confirmed by ultrasound measurement of crown-rump length at <14 weeks’ gestation. Thereafter, the ultrasonographers, who were masked to the values, measured the fetal head circumference, biparietal diameter, occipitofrontal diameter, abdominal circumference, and femur length in triplicate every 5 weeks (within 1 week either side) using identical ultrasound equipment at each site (4–7 scans per pregnancy). Velocity increments across a range of intervals between measures were modeled using fractional polynomial regression. RESULTS: Peak velocity was observed at a similar gestational age: 16 and 17 weeks’ gestation for head circumference (12.2 mm/wk), and 16 weeks’ gestation for abdominal circumference (11.8 mm/wk) and femur length (3.2 mm/wk). However, velocity growth slowed down rapidly for head circumference, biparietal diameter, occipitofrontal diameter, and femur length, with an almost linear reduction toward term that was more marked for femur length. Conversely, abdominal circumference velocity remained relatively steady throughout pregnancy. The change in velocity with gestational age was more evident for head circumference, biparietal diameter, occipitofrontal diameter, and femur length than for abdominal circumference when the change was expressed as a percentage of fetal size at 40 weeks’ gestation. We have also shown how to obtain accurate conditional fetal velocity based on our previous methodological work. CONCLUSION: The fetal skeleton and abdomen have different velocity growth patterns during intrauterine life. Accordingly, we have produced international Fetal Growth Velocity Increment Standards to complement the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Fetal Growth Standards so as to monitor fetal well-being comprehensively worldwide. Fetal growth velocity curves may be valuable if one wants to study the pathophysiology of fetal growth. We provide an application that can be used easily in clinical practice to evaluate changes in fetal size as conditional velocity for a more refined assessment of fetal growth than is possible at present (https://lxiao5.shinyapps.io/fetal_growth/). The application is freely available with the other INTERGROWTH-21(st) tools at https://intergrowth21.tghn.org/standards-tools/. Elsevier 2021-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7858163/ /pubmed/32768431 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2020.07.054 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research
Ohuma, Eric O.
Villar, José
Feng, Yuan
Xiao, Luo
Salomon, Laurent
Barros, Fernando C.
Cheikh Ismail, Leila
Stones, William
Jaffer, Yasmin
Oberto, Manuela
Noble, J. Alison
Gravett, Michael G.
Wu, Qingqing
Victora, Cesar G.
Lambert, Ann
Di Nicola, Paola
Purwar, Manorama
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
Kennedy, Stephen H.
Papageorghiou, Aris T.
Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project
title Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project
title_full Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project
title_fullStr Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project
title_full_unstemmed Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project
title_short Fetal growth velocity standards from the Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study of the INTERGROWTH-21(st) Project
title_sort fetal growth velocity standards from the fetal growth longitudinal study of the intergrowth-21(st) project
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7858163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32768431
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2020.07.054
work_keys_str_mv AT ohumaerico fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT villarjose fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT fengyuan fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT xiaoluo fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT salomonlaurent fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT barrosfernandoc fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT cheikhismailleila fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT stoneswilliam fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT jafferyasmin fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT obertomanuela fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT noblejalison fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT gravettmichaelg fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT wuqingqing fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT victoracesarg fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT lambertann fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT dinicolapaola fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT purwarmanorama fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT bhuttazulfiqara fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT kennedystephenh fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT papageorghiouarist fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject
AT fetalgrowthvelocitystandardsfromthefetalgrowthlongitudinalstudyoftheintergrowth21stproject