| Literature DB >> 33931016 |
Ramya Vijayram1,2, Nikhita Damaraju1,2, Ashley Xavier1,2, Bapu Koundinya Desiraju3,4, Ramachandran Thiruvengadam3,4, Sumit Misra3,4, Shilpa Chopra3,4, Ashok Khurana5, Nitya Wadhwa3,4, Raghunathan Rengaswamy2,6,7, Himanshu Sinha8,9,10, Shinjini Bhatnagar11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Different formulae have been developed globally to estimate gestational age (GA) by ultrasonography in the first trimester of pregnancy. In this study, we develop an Indian population-specific dating formula and compare its performance with published formulae. Finally, we evaluate the implications of the choice of dating method on preterm birth (PTB) rate. This study's data was from GARBH-Ini, an ongoing pregnancy cohort of North Indian women to study PTB.Entities:
Keywords: CRL; Crown-rump length; GARBH-Ini; Garbhini-GA1; Gestational age; Last menstrual period; Machine learning; Preterm birth
Year: 2021 PMID: 33931016 PMCID: PMC8088008 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-021-03807-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1Outline of the data selection process for different datasets – (a) TRAINING DATASET and (b) TEST DATASET. Coloured boxes indicate the datasets used in the analysis. The names of each of the dataset are indicated below the box. Exclusion criteria for each step are indicated. Np indicates the number of participants included or excluded by that particular criterion and No indicates the number of unique observations derived from the participants in a dataset
Baseline characteristics of the participants included in the TRAINING DATASET (Np = 1721) to compare different methods of dating
| Sociodemographic characteristics | Median (IQR) or N (%)or Mean ± SD |
|---|---|
| Age (year) | 23 (21–26) |
| GA at enrolment by LMP (weeks) | 11.31 ± 2.67 |
| GA at enrolment by USG-Hadlock (weeks) | 10.87 ± 2.28 |
| BMI at enrolment into the cohort a | |
| Underweight | 27.20% |
| Normal weight | 59.93% |
| Obese | 9.09% |
| Overweight | 1.66% |
| Haemoglobin (g/dL) | 8.8 (8.2–9.2) |
| Height (cm) | 153.0 (149.2–156.8) |
| Socioeconomic status b | |
| Upper class | 0.66% |
| Upper middle class | 15.40% |
| Lower middle class | 33.98% |
| Upper lower class | 48.96% |
| Lower class | 0.43% |
| Undetermined | 0.57% |
| Parity (number) | |
| 0 | 49.53% |
| 1 | 33.55% |
| 2 | 12.60% |
| 3 | 3.34% |
| 4 | 0.74% |
| 5 | 0.14% |
| Level of education | |
| Illiterate | 21.58% |
| Literate or primary school | 8.63% |
| Middle school | 15.09% |
| High school | 18.61% |
| Post high school diploma | 20.89% |
| Graduate | 12.23% |
| Post-graduate | 2.94% |
| Occupation | |
| Unemployed | 93.48% |
| Unskilled worker | 3.34% |
| Semi-skilled worker | 0.97% |
| Skilled worker | 1.40% |
| Clerk, shop, farm owner | 0.17% |
| Semi-professional | 0.26% |
| Professional | 0.34% |
| Religion | |
| Hindu | 92.14% |
| Muslim | 6.60% |
| Sikh | 0.40% |
| Christian | 0.74% |
| Buddhist | 0.00% |
| More than one religion | 0.09% |
| Fuel used for cooking c | |
| Biomass fuel | 7.86% |
| Clean fuel d | 92.14% |
| Source of drinking water | |
| Safe water e | 49.80% |
| Unsafe water | 50.20% |
| Second-hand tobacco smoke | |
| Exposed | 19.23% |
| Unexposed | 80.57% |
| Undetermined | 0.20% |
| History of any chronic illnesses f | |
| Absent | 99.03% |
| Present | 0.97% |
| History of hypertensive disease of pregnancy | |
| Absent | 99.57% |
| Present | 0.43% |
| History of contraceptive at the time of conception | |
| Absent | 90.79% |
| Present | 7.30% |
| Outcomeg | |
| POG at delivery (Np = 1510) | 39.00 (37.71–39.86) |
| Birthweight (Np = 1211) | 2832 (2500–3200) |
| Birthweight centile (Np = 1211) | 19 (6–43) |
| Birthweight Z score (Np = 1211) | −0.88 (−1.52 – −0.18) |
| PTB (Np = 1510) | 251 (16.62%) |
| SGA (Np = 1211) | 408 (33.69%) |
a Pre-pregnancy BMI was calculated as weight (kg)/height2 (m) from participants’ weight and height measured at enrolment. BMI categories were defined as underweight (< 18.5); normal (18.5–24.9); overweight (25.0–29.9); obese (≥ 30.0)
b Socioeconomic status was assessed using Modified Kuppuswamy’s socioeconomic scale [25], calculated using education and occupation of the head of the family and monthly family income
c Indoor air pollution: use of biomass fuel for cooking or presence of a smoker in the residential compound, as reported by the participant
d Clean fuel includes liquefied petroleum gas and electricity
e Safe water includes bottled water or piped water into the residence
f Chronic illnesses include a history of hypertension, diabetes, cardiac disease and thyroid disorders
g Denominators for these outcome rates are variable depending on availability of data
Fig. 2a Distribution of the difference between USG- and LMP-based GA. The x-axis is the difference between USG and LMP-based GA in weeks, and the y-axis is the number of observations. b BA analysis to evaluate the bias between USG and LMP-based GA. The x-axis is mean of Hadlock and LMP-based GA in weeks, and the y-axis is the difference between Hadlock and LMP-based GA in weeks. Regression line with 95% CI is shown. c Comparison of individual-level classification of preterm birth by Hadlock- and LMP-based methods. Green (term birth for both), red (preterm birth for both), blue (term birth for LMP but preterm birth for Hadlock) and purple (term for Hadlock but preterm for LMP)
Fig. 3Comparison of data chosen to be reference data for the development of dating formula by (a) clinical and (b) data-driven (DBSCAN) approaches. The x-axis is CRL in cm, and the y-axis is GA in weeks (LMP-based are datapoints, Garbhini-GA1 is regression line). After filtering, the data points selected (TRUE) are coloured black and points not selected (FALSE) are white
Pairwise comparison of mean difference (LoA) between different first-trimester dating formulae (Difference: Column formula - Row formula). Values shown in white are for the TRAINING DATASET (No = 2562) and values shown in grey are for the TEST DATASET (No = 808) (see Methods for details)
The Jaccard similarity coefficient of PTB classification between each pair of the method
| Formula | LMP | Hadlock | McLennan-Schluter | Robinson-Fleming | Sahota | Verburg | INTERGROWTH-21st | Garbhini-GA1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LMP | 1.00 | 0.49 | 0.50 | 0.50 | 0.52 | 0.53 | 0.53 | 0.50 |
| Hadlock | 1.00 | 0.90 | 0.88 | 0.88 | 0.81 | 0.80 | 0.77 | |
| McLennan-Schluter | 1.00 | 0.98 | 0.83 | 0.82 | 0.80 | 0.69 | ||
| Robinson-Fleming | 1.00 | 0.82 | 0.81 | 0.79 | 0.68 | |||
| Sahota | 1.00 | 0.92 | 0.89 | 0.83 | ||||
| Verburg | 1.00 | 0.87 | 0.83 | |||||
| INTERGROWTH-21st | 1.00 | 0.87 | ||||||
| Garbhini-GA1 | 1.00 |