Cargando…

Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation

OBJECTIVES: To use machine learning to determine what information on Doppler velocimetry and maternal and fetal heart rates, collected at 20-24 weeks gestation, correlates best with fetal growth restriction according to the estimated fetal weight at 34-38 weeks. STUDY DESIGN: Data of 4496 pregnant w...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Odendaal, HJ, Crockart, IC, Du Plessis, C, Brink, L, Groenewald, CA
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8607280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34816253
_version_ 1784602533887475712
author Odendaal, HJ
Crockart, IC
Du Plessis, C
Brink, L
Groenewald, CA
author_facet Odendaal, HJ
Crockart, IC
Du Plessis, C
Brink, L
Groenewald, CA
author_sort Odendaal, HJ
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To use machine learning to determine what information on Doppler velocimetry and maternal and fetal heart rates, collected at 20-24 weeks gestation, correlates best with fetal growth restriction according to the estimated fetal weight at 34-38 weeks. STUDY DESIGN: Data of 4496 pregnant women, collected prospectively for the Safe Passage Study, from August 2007 to August 2016, were used for the present analysis. Doppler flow velocity of the uterine, umbilical, and middle cerebral arteries and transabdominally recorded maternal and fetal ECGs were collected at 20-24 weeks gestation and fetal biometry collected at 34-38 weeks from which the estimated fetal weight was calculated. Fetal growth restriction was defined as an estimated fetal weight below the 10th centile. Accelerations and decelerations of the fetal and maternal heart rates were quantified as gained or lost beats per hour of recording respectively. Machine learning with receiver operative characteristic curves were then used to determine which model gives the best performance. RESULTS: The final model performed exceptionally well across all evaluation metrics, particularly so for the Stochastic Gradient Descent method: achieving a 93% average for Classification Accuracy, Recall, Precision and F1-Score to identify the fetus with an estimated weight below the 10th percentile at 34-38 weeks. Ranking determined that the most important standard feature was the umbilical artery pulsatility index. However, the excellent overall accuracy is likely due to the value added by the pre-processed features regarding fetal gained beats and accelerations. CONCLUSION: Fetal movements, as characterized by gained beats as early as 20-24 weeks gestation, contribute to the value of the flow velocimetry of the umbilical artery at 34-38 weeks in identifying the growth restricted fetus.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8607280
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-86072802021-11-22 Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation Odendaal, HJ Crockart, IC Du Plessis, C Brink, L Groenewald, CA Glob J Pediatr Neonatal Care Article OBJECTIVES: To use machine learning to determine what information on Doppler velocimetry and maternal and fetal heart rates, collected at 20-24 weeks gestation, correlates best with fetal growth restriction according to the estimated fetal weight at 34-38 weeks. STUDY DESIGN: Data of 4496 pregnant women, collected prospectively for the Safe Passage Study, from August 2007 to August 2016, were used for the present analysis. Doppler flow velocity of the uterine, umbilical, and middle cerebral arteries and transabdominally recorded maternal and fetal ECGs were collected at 20-24 weeks gestation and fetal biometry collected at 34-38 weeks from which the estimated fetal weight was calculated. Fetal growth restriction was defined as an estimated fetal weight below the 10th centile. Accelerations and decelerations of the fetal and maternal heart rates were quantified as gained or lost beats per hour of recording respectively. Machine learning with receiver operative characteristic curves were then used to determine which model gives the best performance. RESULTS: The final model performed exceptionally well across all evaluation metrics, particularly so for the Stochastic Gradient Descent method: achieving a 93% average for Classification Accuracy, Recall, Precision and F1-Score to identify the fetus with an estimated weight below the 10th percentile at 34-38 weeks. Ranking determined that the most important standard feature was the umbilical artery pulsatility index. However, the excellent overall accuracy is likely due to the value added by the pre-processed features regarding fetal gained beats and accelerations. CONCLUSION: Fetal movements, as characterized by gained beats as early as 20-24 weeks gestation, contribute to the value of the flow velocimetry of the umbilical artery at 34-38 weeks in identifying the growth restricted fetus. 2021 2021-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8607280/ /pubmed/34816253 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
spellingShingle Article
Odendaal, HJ
Crockart, IC
Du Plessis, C
Brink, L
Groenewald, CA
Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation
title Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation
title_full Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation
title_fullStr Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation
title_full_unstemmed Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation
title_short Accelerations of the Fetal Heart Rate in the Screening for Fetal Growth Restriction at 34-38 Week’s Gestation
title_sort accelerations of the fetal heart rate in the screening for fetal growth restriction at 34-38 week’s gestation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8607280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34816253
work_keys_str_mv AT odendaalhj accelerationsofthefetalheartrateinthescreeningforfetalgrowthrestrictionat3438weeksgestation
AT crockartic accelerationsofthefetalheartrateinthescreeningforfetalgrowthrestrictionat3438weeksgestation
AT duplessisc accelerationsofthefetalheartrateinthescreeningforfetalgrowthrestrictionat3438weeksgestation
AT brinkl accelerationsofthefetalheartrateinthescreeningforfetalgrowthrestrictionat3438weeksgestation
AT groenewaldca accelerationsofthefetalheartrateinthescreeningforfetalgrowthrestrictionat3438weeksgestation