| Literature DB >> 24699523 |
Isabelle Ruchonnet-Metrailler1, Bettina Bessieres2, Damien Bonnet3, Shamila Vibhushan4, Christophe Delacourt5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Abnormalities of the fetal pulmonary vasculature may affect lung morphogenesis. Postnatal studies have suggested that pulmonary hypoplasia (PH) may be associated with congenital heart diseases (CHDs).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24699523 PMCID: PMC3974773 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0093557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
CHD diagnosis (n = 119).
| Diagnosis |
| IPCCC codes |
| Right outflow obstruction: | ||
| Tetralogy of Fallot, | 9 | 01.01.01 |
| Pulmonary atresia+ventricular septal defect | 13 | 01.01.06 |
| Pulmonary atresia+tricuspid atresia | 3 | 09.05.11; 06.01.01 |
| Tricuspid atresia | 2 | 06.01.01 |
| Tricuspid atresia+pulmonary stenosis | 1 | 06.01.01; 09.10.01 |
| Ebstein’s malformation | 1 | 12.02.77 |
| Pulmonary stenosis | 2 | 09.05.92 |
| Pulmonary atresia+intact ventricular septum | 3 | 01.01.07 |
| Right cardiomegaly | 4 | 10.17.18 |
| Right ventricular hypoplasia, | 2 | 07.02.00 |
| Tricuspid atresia+right ventricular hypoplasia+pulmonary arterial hypoplasia | 1 | 06.01.01; 07.02.00; 09.10.11 |
| Pulmonary arterial hypoplasia | 1 | 09.10.11 |
| Left outflow obstruction: | ||
| Left ventricular hypoplasia | 8 | 07.07.00 |
| Left ventricular hypoplasia+mitral atresia | 2 | 07.07.00; 06.02.01 |
| Left ventricular hypoplasia+aortic atresia | 2 | 07.07.00; 09.15.03 |
| Left ventricular hypoplasia+mitral atresia+aortic atresia | 11 | 07.07.00; 06.02.01; 09.15.03 |
| Left ventricular hypoplasia+anomalous pulmonary venous connection | 2 | 07.07.00; 04.08.07 |
| Aortic coarctation | 4 | 09.29.01 |
| Aortic arch hypoplasia | 6 | 09.29.11 |
| Interrupted aortic arch | 2 | 09.29.31 |
| Mitral valvar abnormality | 5 | 06.02.00 |
| Aortic valvar abnormality | 3 | 09.15.19 |
| Mitral atresia+Aortic atresia | 1 | 06.02.01; 09.15.03 |
| Transposition of great arteries and variants: | ||
| Transposition of great arteries | 2 | 01.05.01 |
| Transposition of great arteries & intact ventricular septum | 1 | 01.01.02 |
| Congenitally corrected transposition of great arteries | 2 | 01.01.03 |
| Double outlet right ventricle: transposition type | 2 | 01.01.18 |
| Transposition of great arteries+pulmonary trunk hypoplasia | 2 | 01.05.01; 09.07.11 |
| Anomalous pulmonary venous connection | 3 | 04.08.07 |
| Other CHDs – complex CHDs: | ||
| Ventricular septal defect | 5 | 07.10.00 |
| Abnormalities of systemic venous return | 2 | 04.00.07 |
| Common arterial trunk (truncusarteriosus) | 2 | 09.01.01 |
| Atrioventricular septal defect | 4 | 06.06.00 |
| Atrial septal defect | 2 | 05.03.00 |
| Double outlet right ventricle | 1 | 01.05.03 |
| Aortic arch branch abnormality | 1 | 09.30.00 |
| Left ventricular hypoplasia+aortic arch hypoplasia + pulmonary atresia | 1 | 07.07.00; 09.29.11; 09.05.11 |
| Heterotaxy | 1 | 01.01.22, 03.01.02, 01.01.04, 06.06.00 |
Characteristics of the fetuses, assigned to four subgroups according to the category of CHD.
| Right outflow obstruction(n = 42) | Left outflow obstruction(n = 46) | TGA (n = 9) | Other CHDs (n = 22) | |
|
| 25/17 | 26/20 | 7/2 | 12/10 |
|
| 28.0 (24.0–31.0) | 26.5 (23.0–32.0) | 27.0 (24.0–33.0) | 26.0 (23.3–31.8) |
|
| 1050 (393–1710) | 950 (473–1623) | 900 (720–1850) | 895 (407–1825) |
|
| 23.3 (6.6–30.3) | 21.8(13.3–29.6) | 25.0 (18.0–45.0) | 17.9 (9.7–31.5) |
|
| 90.8 (59.1–113.0) | 112.0 (84.5–124.1)# | 124.5 (105.6–129.8)# | 97.0 (71.8–102.4) |
|
| −1.4 (−5.4–3.1) | 1.5 (−2.4–4.3)# | 4.9 (0.9–9.4)# | −1.1 (−3.7–0.5) |
|
| 0.021 (0.014–0.026) | 0.024 (0.018–0.029)# | 0.025 (0.024–0.025) | 0.019 (0.015–0.023) |
|
| 80.6 (56.7–101.7) | 97.1 (76.9–109–0)# | 105.3 (91.7–114.8)# | 84.2 (66.0–93.3) |
|
| 16.2 | 11.6 | 0 | 33.3 |
|
| 16.7 | 19.6 | 0 | 31.8 |
Values are medians (IQR) or n (% of each subgroup). BW: body weight; LW: lung weight. § The mean values for the population and the residuals are derived from the regression model relating LW and BW (see text and Figure S1);
expected values derived from [18];
*p value<0.05 in multiple group analysis;
#p value <0.05 when comparing each subgroup with the one with right outflow obstruction.
Figure 1Individual residual values.
Fetuses are classified into four categories on the basis of the CHD. Values are deviations of each observation from the sample mean. Horizontal bar: median value in each subgroup. Kruskal-Wallis test: p = 0.008. *p<0.05 for the comparison between subgroups.
Characteristics of fetuses with CHD and PH.
| Sex | Cardiac malformation | Gestational age (wks) | BW (g) | LW/BW | Associated malformations | Karyotype | |
| 1 | M | Valvular mitral dysplasia | 35 | 3130 | 0.007 | None | Normal |
| 2 | M | Tricuspid atresia+mitral atresia, | 36 | 3000 | 0.009 | None | Normal |
| 3 | M | Mitral atresia+aortic atresia | 15 | 85 | 0.005 | Renal fusion, campylodactyly | Mosaic T18 |
| 4 | F | Pulmonary atresia+Tricuspid atresia | 27 | 860 | 0.007 | None | Normal |
| 5 | M | Tetralogy of Fallot | 22 | 266 | 0.005 | Renal hypoplasia, VLBW, thymic hypoplasia | Duplication 19p13 |
| 6 | F | Pulmonary atresia with septal defect | 24 | 240 | 0.005 | Duodenal stenosis, Campylodactyly | 46XXX |
| 7 | F | Interrupted aortic arch | 23 | 210 | 0.011 | IUGR, Campylodactylia | Triplody |
| 8 | M | Pulmonary atresia with septal defect | 29 | 1380 | 0.002 | Hexadactyly | Not available |
| 9 | M | Right cardiomegaly | 30 | 2250 | 0.011 | None | Normal |
| 10 | F | Pulmonary atresia with septal defect | 22 | 259 | 0.009 | Renal hypoplasia | T14 |
| 11 | M | Aortic coarctation | 16 | 88 | 0.013 | Renal cystic dilatation | Not available |
| 12 | M | Atrial septal defect | 25 | 580 | 0.013 | Clynodactyly, omphalocele | Normal |
| 13 | F | Right ventricular hypoplasia and septal defect | 18 | 210 | 0.010 | None | Normal |
| 14 | M | Tetralogy of Fallot | 29 | 1560 | 0.005 | None | Normal |
| 15 | M | Right cardiomegaly | 33 | 2800 | 0.007 | Hydrothorax | Normal |
Characteristics of the fetuses, assigned to two subgroups according to the association of PH with CHD.
| CHD and no PH ( | CHD and PH ( | |
| Male | 60 (58) | 10 (67) |
| Gestational age (wks) | 27.0 (24.0–32.0) | 25.0 (22.0–29.5) |
| BW (g) | 965 (557–1715) | 580 (225–1905) |
| LW (g) | 23.55 (13.35–32.90) | 2.50 (1.65–13.64) |
| LW/BW | 0.023 (0.019–0.028) | 0.007 (0.005–0.010) |
| LW/BW (% of expected) | 93.1 (77.3–107.8) | 30.7 (20.1–38.1) |
| Chromosomal abnormality | 12/93 (13) | 5/13 (38) |
| Any associated extracardiac abnormality | 68 (65) | 12 (80) |
| IUGR | 11 (11) | 2 (13) |
| Renal hypoplasia | 7 (7) | 2 (13) |
| Omphalocele | 3 (3) | 1 (7) |
| Thoracic dystrophy | 1 (1) | 0 (0) |
| Hydrothorax | 0 (0) | 1 (7) |
| Right outflow obstruction | 33 (32) | 9 (60) |
| Left outflow obstruction | 42 (40) | 4 (27) |
| TGA | 9 (9) | 0 (0) |
| Other CHDs | 20 (19) | 2 (13) |
Values are medians (IQR) or n (% of each subgroup). BW: body weight; LW: lung weight.
*P value<0.05;
**P value<0.0001.
Univariate and multivariate analyses assessing the risk of PH as a function of CHD category, presence of an abnormal karyotype and the presence of a malformation likely to interfere with lung growth (IUGR, renal hypoplasia, omphalocele, thoracic dystrophy, or hydrothorax).
| Variable | OR | 95% CI | p value |
|
| |||
| CHD with right outflow obstruction | 3.227 | 1.061–9.817 | 0.039 |
| Abnormal karyotype | 4.219 | 1.183–15.041 | 0.026 |
| Associated extracardiac abnormality | 2.389 | 0.728–7.834 | 0.151 |
|
| |||
| CHD with right outflow obstruction | 3.812 | 1.094–13.281 | 0.036 |
| + Abnormal karyotype | 4.619 | 1.218–17.507 | 0.024 |
| CHD with right outflow obstruction | 4.353 | 1.193–15.875 | 0.026 |
| + Abnormal karyotype | 3.737 | 0.941–14.848 | 0.061 |
| + Associated extracardiac abnormality | 2.716 | 0.684–10.787 | 0.156 |
Figure 2Individual PA/Ao values.
Values were available for 35 fetuses with CHD and right outflow obstruction, and 45 fetuses with CHDs of other types. Horizontal bar: median value in each subgroup. Dashed horizontal line: expected normal AP/Ao value (i.e. 1.2). p<0.0001 for comparisons between subgroups.
Figure 3CD31 immunohistochemistry.
Original magnification×10, and ×40 magnification of the area identified by a rectangle. CD31 (brown) and counterstaining with hematoxylin. Fetuses with PH (A, C, E) were compared with fetuses of a similar gestational age without PH (B, D, F). A: Fetus with right ventricular hypoplasia and a septal defect, 18 weeks, LW/BW = 0.010; B: Fetus with pulmonary atresia and a septal defect, 16 weeks, LW/BW = 0.024; C: Fetus with tetralogy of Fallot, 22 weeks, LW/BW = 0.005; D: Fetus with an atrioventricular septal defect, 17 weeks, LW/BW = 0.027; E: Fetus with pulmonary atresia and tricuspid atresia, 36 weeks, LW/BW = 0.009; F: Fetus with tetralogy of Fallot, 33 weeks, LW/BW = 0.029.
Figure 4VEGF immunohistochemistry.
Original magnification×10, and ×40 magnification of the area identified by a rectangle. VEGF (brown) and counterstaining with hematoxylin. Fetuses with PH (A, C, E) were compared withfetusesof a similar gestational age without PH (B, D, F). A: Fetus with right ventricular hypoplasia and a septal defect, 18 weeks, LW/BW = 0.010; B: Fetus with pulmonary atresia and a septal defect, 16 weeks, LW/BW = 0.024; C: Fetus with tetralogy of Fallot, 22 weeks, LW/BW = 0.005; D: Fetus with atrioventricular septal defect, 17 weeks, LW/BW = 0.027; E: Fetus with pulmonary atresia and tricuspid atresia, 36 weeks, LW/BW = 0.009; F: Fetus with tetralogy of Fallot, 33 weeks, LW/BW = 0.029.