| Literature DB >> 36060697 |
Victoria J King1, Laura Bennet1, Peter R Stone2, Alys Clark2,3, Alistair J Gunn1, Simerdeep K Dhillon1.
Abstract
Fetal growth restriction (FGR) is a major cause of stillbirth, prematurity and impaired neurodevelopment. Its etiology is multifactorial, but many cases are related to impaired placental development and dysfunction, with reduced nutrient and oxygen supply. The fetus has a remarkable ability to respond to hypoxic challenges and mounts protective adaptations to match growth to reduced nutrient availability. However, with progressive placental dysfunction, chronic hypoxia may progress to a level where fetus can no longer adapt, or there may be superimposed acute hypoxic events. Improving detection and effective monitoring of progression is critical for the management of complicated pregnancies to balance the risk of worsening fetal oxygen deprivation in utero, against the consequences of iatrogenic preterm birth. Current surveillance modalities include frequent fetal Doppler ultrasound, and fetal heart rate monitoring. However, nearly half of FGR cases are not detected in utero, and conventional surveillance does not prevent a high proportion of stillbirths. We review diagnostic challenges and limitations in current screening and monitoring practices and discuss potential ways to better identify FGR, and, critically, to identify the "tipping point" when a chronically hypoxic fetus is at risk of progressive acidosis and stillbirth.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; fetal growth restriction (FGR); fetal heart rate variability (fHRV); fetal hypoxia; preterm brain injury; stillbirth
Year: 2022 PMID: 36060697 PMCID: PMC9437293 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2022.959750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.755
FIGURE 1Schematic showing current FGR detection and monitoring techniques and modalities, with potential avenues for improvement. aFECG, abdominal fetal electrocardiogram; CTG, cardiotocogram; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; UA, umbilical artery; MCA, middle cerebral artery; DV, ductus venosus; PI, pulsatility index; STV, short term variability; LTV, long term variability; PlGF, placental growth factor; sFlt1, soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1; PAPP-A, pregnancy associated plasma protein A; β-HCG, beta human chorionic gonadotropin; SPINT, serine protease inhibitor.
Summary of select studies of potential biochemical and physiological markers of FGR.
| Markers | Design | Subjects | Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doppler ultrasound measures of UA, MCA, CPR | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 31 studies (mix of observational cohort studies and RCTs of early-onset FGR (diagnosed <34 weeks) | Increased risk of death for early-onset FGR fetuses with absent or reversed end-diastolic velocities in either the UA (OR 3.59 absent, 7.27 reversed) or DV (OR 11.6, absent or reversed) |
|
| Systematic review and meta-analysis | 128 studies (mix of prospective, retrospective; mix of CPR alone, MCA Doppler alone and both CPR and MCA Doppler) | CPR-PI outperforms UA and MCA Doppler in prediction of composite adverse outcome (0.59 sensitivity, 0.91 specificity) and emergency delivery for fetal distress (0.58 sensitivity, 0.89 specificity) |
| |
| Cohort analysis of two European multicenter trials (GRIT and TRUFFLE) | 26–36 weeks gestation pregnant women, stratified by monitoring method for delivery | Early FGR monitoring with both cCTG and DV Doppler assessment was associated with a trend of improved survival without impairment at 2 years (84%), compared with only cCTG monitoring (80% GRIT; 77% TRUFFLE) or immediate delivery (70%) |
| |
| Prospective RCT (TRUFFLE study) | 26–32 weeks gestation singleton early-onset FGR pregnancy | Using late changes in DV waveform to inform delivery may improve 2-year outcomes |
| |
| Delphi consensus | 45 experienced clinical opinions | Early-onset FGR: UtA-PI and/or UA-PI >95th percentile |
| |
| Late-onset FGR: CPR <5th percentile or UA-PI >95th percentile | ||||
| Maternal serum markers | Prospective case-control | 15 control, 15 FGR pregnancies | Maternal serum proteome profiling: Proapolipoprotein C-II, apolipoprotein C-III1, and apolipoprotein C-III2 constitute IUGR signature (sensitivity 0.73, specificity 0.87, AUC 0.86) |
|
| Pregnancy-associated plasma protein A | Prospective | First trimester screening study in 786 pregnant women (3.2% SGA) | <5th percentile PAPP-A group (0.37 MoM) during first trimester associated with SGA (sensitivity 0.10, specificity 0.97, PPV 0.16, NPV 0.95) |
|
| Systematic review and meta-analysis | 32 studies of first trimester screening in 175,240 pregnancies | <5th percentile PAPP-A group associated with birth weight <10th centile OR 2.08, <5th centile OR 2.83. Birthweight <5th centile LR +ve 2.65, LR −ve 0.85 |
| |
| Micro-RNAs | Retrospective case-control | 80 AGA, 80 FGR pregnancies | Combination of microRNA profile (miR-16-5p, miR-20a-5p, miR-145-5p, miR-146a-5p, miR-181a-5p, miR-342-3p, and miR-574-3p) during the first trimester detected FGR pregnancies (sensitivity 0.4268, specificity 0.95, cut off >0.6578 at 0.1 FPR) |
|
| Placental growth factors | Prospective case-control | 32 uncomplicated, 49 SGA and 126 FGR pregnancies | High ratio of placental growth factors (sFIt-1/PIGF) was associated with severity of early-onset FGR <97.4 stage I, up to 523.7 stage II, ≥523.7 stage III (PPV 0.986, 0.429, 0.462 respectively) |
|
| Prospective observational | 138 singleton pregnancies with EFW <10th centile between 20 and 31 weeks of gestation | sFIt-1/PIGF ratio cut-off value of 38 predictive of delivery before 2 weeks (NPV 1) |
| |
| Secondary analysis of two RCTs | Preeclampsia Intervention with Esomeprazole trial (22 AGA infants BW > 10th centile and 75 SGA infants BW < 10th centile) and Preeclampsia Intervention 2 trial (40 AGA infants BW > 10th centile and 95 SGA infants BW < 10th centile) | SPINT1 was decreased in pre-eclamptic pregnancies complicated by growth restriction. Ratios of sFlt-1/SPINT1 and sFlt1/PlGF were increased |
| |
| Secondary analysis of two RCTs | Maternal samples were assessed from the fetal longitudinal assessment of growth 2 study (152 AGA and 75 SGA) and the biomarker and ultrasound measures for preventable stillbirth study (198 SGA 198, 23 preeclampsia cases and 182 controls) | At 36 weeks of gestation, circulating SPINT2 concentration was increased in patients who developed preeclampsia or delivered a SGA infant |
| |
| Human chorionic gonadotropin | Retrospective | 1900 AGA and 146 FGR+PE pregnancies | Second trimester intact hCG (>3 MoM) associated with increased risk of developing FGR |
|
| Midkine | Prospective case-control | 72 AGA, 72 SGA pregnancies | High maternal serum Midkine at ∼36 weeks of gestation predictive of idiopathic FGR at term (sensitivity 0.63, specificity 0.64 at cut-off value 0.20) |
|
| Maternal cardiovascular markers | Retrospective | 136 AGA, 16 FGR pregnancies | High maternal peripheral vascular resistance (>1355) at 22–24 weeks gestation is predictive of FGR (sensitivity 0.842, specificity 0.932, AUC 0.88) |
|
| Placental MRI | Observational | 12 AGA and 14 early-onset FGR pregnancies | FGR placenta have slow intervillous blood flow and patchy unperfused areas. Perfusion dynamics worsen with intermittent perturbations in flow |
|
| Observational | 17 FGR and 36 normal pregnancies, between 28 and 38 weeks gestation | Placental perfusion fraction lower in FGR |
| |
| Prospective observational | 79 control 35 FGR pregnancies between 18 and 39 weeks gestation | Placental volumes smaller in FGR vs. controls |
| |
| Prospective observational | 94 control, 36 FGR/SGA pregnancies >18 weeks gestation | Microstructural alterations in FGR, particularly late-onset FGR |
| |
| Prospective observational | 46 controls, 34 FGR pregnancies between 18 and39 weeks gestation | Proposed placental volume algorithm can identify FGR (0.86 accuracy, 0.77 precision, 0.86 recall, AUC 0.86) |
| |
| Retrospective case control | 1163 SGA (birthweight <3rd percentile) and 1163 sex and gestational age matched controls | LTV and STV in FHR have better predictive accuracy earlier (<34 weeks) in gestation. Marker values vary with fetal behavioral state |
| |
| Two separate prospective studies | singleton pregnancy; 31 SGA (EFW <10th percentile for gestational age) and 30 AGA controls | SGA does not show differences in Dawes and Redman parameter set between day and night; AGA does |
| |
| Retrospective cross-sectional study | 9071 normal, 1986 SGA (birthweight <10th percentile), 543 extreme SGA (birthweight <3rd percentile) | SGA fetuses have lower baseline heart rate from 34 weeks, lower STV and LTV, fewer accelerations compared with AGA fetuses |
| |
| Prospective case control | 66 SGA (abdominal circumference <5th percentile) and 79 uncomplicated pregnancies | Decrease of AC (OR 2.1) and DC (OR 0.5) in SGA fetuses from 25 weeks gestation compared with AGA; association is stronger in cases with brain-sparing (MCA-PI) |
|
DV, ductus venosus; UA, umbilical artery; MCA, middle cerebral artery; CPR, cerebroplacental ratio; PI, pulsatility index; sFlt1, soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1; PlGF, placental growth factor; PE, pre-eclampsia; EFW, estimated fetal weight; cCTG, computerized cardiotocography; MoM, multiple of the median; AUC, area under the curve.
FIGURE 2Example of placental MRI modalities. Comparing central slices through the placenta, (A) is a normal pregnancy (fetal abdominal diameter 96.5 mm) at 37 weeks gestation, with placental thickness of 41.2 mm. (B) is FGR (fetal abdominal diameter 79.2 mm, birthweight 1.4 centile) at 37 weeks gestation, with placental thickness of 21.8 mm. Placentae in FGR pregnancies are typically described as smaller and appearing darker and more heterogenous in MRI. (C) shows identification of a placental region of interest. (D) shows a parameter map of apparent diffusion coefficient, a parameter that relates to blood movement, and is typically extracted from MRI studies.