Literature DB >> 10920333

Long-term outcome in twin-twin transfusion syndrome treated with serial aggressive amnioreduction.

G Mari1, L Detti, U Oz, A Z Abuhamad.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine long-term outcomes among pregnancies complicated by twin-twin transfusion syndrome and treated in a tertiary center with serial aggressive amnioreduction. STUDY
DESIGN: Thirty-three pregnancies with a diagnosis of twin-twin transfusion syndrome were treated with > or =1 amnioreduction. The perinatal outcome was assessed according to 15 parameters, whereas the main outcome at age > or =2 years was the absence of cerebral palsy.
RESULTS: Gestational age at diagnosis ranged from 14.5 to 33 weeks' gestation (median, 20.6 weeks' gestation), whereas gestational age at delivery was between 18.5 and 37 weeks' gestation (median, 30.5 weeks' gestation). The number of amnioreductions per pregnancy ranged from 1 to 15 (median, 2). At initial examination hydrops of the recipient and absence of the end-diastolic velocity of the umbilical artery in one of the twins were associated with poor prognosis. Fifty-one (77%) twins were born alive. At 24 months after birth both infants from 57% of the pregnancies (19/33) were alive, whereas at least one infant from 70% of the pregnancies (23/33) was alive. Thirty-three infants (78% of the survivors) were older than 36 months at last follow-up. Cerebral palsy was diagnosed in 2 of 42 infants (4.7%). One of the affected infants was born after the fetal death of the cotwin; the other infant was born with congenital cardiac malformations.
CONCLUSIONS: In the group of fetuses in which both twins were delivered alive after 27 weeks' gestation without congenital malformations and survived the neonatal period, no major neurologic handicaps developed in any of the infants. At initial examination both hydrops of the recipient and absence of end-diastolic flow velocity waveforms of the umbilical artery in one of the twins were poor prognostic signs.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10920333     DOI: 10.1067/mob.2000.105583

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Obstet Gynecol        ISSN: 0002-9378            Impact factor:   8.661


  3 in total

1.  Severe gyration and migration disorder in fetofetal transfusion syndrome: two case reports and a review of the literature on the neurological outcome of children with lesions on neuroimaging.

Authors:  Rudolf Ascherl; Ina Sorge; Ulrich Thome; Franz Wolfgang Hirsch; Annett Bläser; Wieland Kiess; Andreas Merkenschlager
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  2017-10-02       Impact factor: 1.475

2.  Prognosis and long-term neurodevelopmental outcome in conservatively treated twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome.

Authors:  Xiangqun Li; Seiichi Morokuma; Kotaro Fukushima; Yuka Otera; Yasuo Yumoto; Kiyomi Tsukimori; Masayuki Ochiai; Toshiro Hara; Norio Wake
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2011-04-22       Impact factor: 3.007

3.  Long-term neurodevelopmental outcome of monochorionic and matched dichorionic twins.

Authors:  Karien E A Hack; Corine Koopman-Esseboom; Jan B Derks; Sjoerd G Elias; Martin J K de Kleine; Wim Baerts; Attie T J I Go; Arty H P Schaap; Mark A H B M van der Hoeven; Alex J Eggink; Krystyna M Sollie; Nynke Weisglas-Kuperus; Gerard H A Visser
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-08-28       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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