| Literature DB >> 35055324 |
Gianluca Gatta1, Graziella Di Grezia2, Vincenzo Cuccurullo3, Celestino Sardu4, Francesco Iovino5, Rosita Comune1, Angelo Ruggiero6, Marilena Chirico7, Daniele La Forgia8, Annarita Fanizzi8, Raffaella Massafra8, Maria Paola Belfiore1,9, Giuseppe Falco10, Alfonso Reginelli1, Luca Brunese11, Roberto Grassi1, Salvatore Cappabianca1, Luigi Viola1.
Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offers excellent spatial and contrast resolution for evaluating a wide variety of pathologies, without exposing patients to ionizing radiations. Additionally, MRI offers reproducible diagnostic imaging results that are not operator-dependent, a major advantage over ultrasound. MRI is commonly used in pregnant women to evaluate, most frequently, acute abdominal and pelvic pain or placental abnormalities, as well as neurological or fetal abnormalities, infections, or neoplasms. However, to date, our knowledge about MRI safety during pregnancy, especially about the administration of gadolinium-based contrast agents, which are able to cross the placental barrier, is still limited, raising concerns about possible negative effects on both the mother and the health of the fetus. Contrast agents that are unable to cross the placenta in a way that is safe for the fetus are desirable. In recent years, some preclinical studies, carried out in rodent models, have evaluated the role of long circulating liposomal nanoparticle-based blood-pool gadolinium contrast agents that do not penetrate the placental barrier due to their size and therefore do not expose the fetus to the contrast agent during pregnancy, preserving it from any hypothetical risks. Hence, we performed a literature review focusing on contrast and non-contrast MRI use during pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; gadolinium; liposomal gadolinium; precision medicine; pregnancy; safety during pregnancy
Year: 2021 PMID: 35055324 PMCID: PMC8778056 DOI: 10.3390/jpm12010009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Commercially available gadolinium-based contrast agents (GBCAs) in Europe approved during pregnancy.
| Trade Name | Marketing Authorisation Holder | Compound | Chemical Structure | Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dotarem® | Guerbet Diagnostic Imaging | Gadoterate meglumine | Macrocyclic | Intraarticular/Intravenous |
| Gadovist® | Bayer Pharmaceuticals | Gadobutrolo | Macrocyclic | Intravenous |
| Magnevist® | Bayer Pharmaceuticals | Gadopentetate dimeglumine | Linear | Intraarticular |
| Multihance® | Bracco Imaging | Gadobenate dimeglumine | Linear | Intravenous |
| Primovist® | Bayer Pharmaceuticals | Gadoxetate disodium | Linear | Intravenous |
| Prohance® | Bracco Imaging | Gadoteridol | Macrocyclic | Intravenous |
Fetal main indications for emergency MRI during pregnancy.
| Site | Indications |
|---|---|
| CNS anomalies | Ventriculomegaly, hemorrhages, lissencephaly, polymicrogyria/pachygyria, gray matter heterotopias, cortical dysplasias, and neural tube defects (e.g., spina bifida/diastematomyelia). |
| Face and palate | In cases in which there is a significant risk of associated brain abnormalities. |
| Neck masses | Neck masses could impair the airway leading to asphyxia at birth. |
| Chest | Congenital diaphragmatic hernias. |
| Abdomen | Abdominal masses or bowel pathologies, including obstruction and atresia. |
CNS: central nervous system.
Figure 1Liposomal nanoparticle-based blood-pool gadolinium contrast agent structure. Low molecular-weight gadolinium-chelated (in red) is inserted, both core-encapsulated and surface-conjugated, in liposome structures made of phospholipid bilayer (in light blue). The liposomes are also coated with PEG (in purple) and thus avoid penetration through placental barrier.