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Observational Study
. 2024;51(4):335-342.
doi: 10.1159/000538857. Epub 2024 Apr 20.

Prenatal Management and Perinatal Outcome in a Large Series of Hydrops Fetalis

Affiliations
Observational Study

Prenatal Management and Perinatal Outcome in a Large Series of Hydrops Fetalis

Lorena María Sebastián de Lucas et al. Fetal Diagn Ther. 2024.

Erratum in

  • Erratum.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Fetal Diagn Ther. 2024;51(6):624. doi: 10.1159/000541608. Epub 2024 Oct 3. Fetal Diagn Ther. 2024. PMID: 39362199 No abstract available.

Abstract

Introduction: Nonimmune hydrops fetalis (NIHF) is the most frequent etiology of hydrops fetalis (HF), accounting for around 95% of cases. It associates high perinatal mortality and morbidity rates. The aim of the study was, first, to investigate etiology, prenatal management, and perinatal outcome in a large single-center series of HF; second, to identify prenatal prognostic factors with impact on perinatal outcome.

Materials and methods: Observational retrospective study of 80 HF diagnosed or referred to a single tertiary center between 2012 and 2021. Clinical characteristics, etiology, prenatal management, and perinatal outcome were recorded. Adverse perinatal outcome was defined as intrauterine fetal death (IUFD), early neonatal death (first 7 days of life) and late neonatal death (between 7 and 28 days).

Results: Seventy-six of the 80 cases (95%) were NIHF, main etiology being genetic disorders (28/76; 36.8%). A total of 26 women (32.5%) opted for termination of pregnancy, all of them in the NIHF group. IUFD occurred in 24 of 54 patients (44.4%) who decided to continue the pregnancy. Intrauterine treatment was performed in 29 cases (53.7%). There were 30 newborns (55.6%). Adverse perinatal outcome rate was 53.7% (29/54), significantly higher in those diagnosed <20 weeks of gestation (82.4% < 20 weeks vs. 40.5% ≥ 20 weeks; p = 0.004). Survival rate was higher when fetal therapy was performed compared to the expectantly managed group (58.6% vs. 32%; p = 0.05). Intrauterine blood transfusion and thoraco-amniotic shunt were the procedures that achieved the highest survival rates (88.9% and 100%, respectively, p = 0.003).

Conclusion: NIHF represented 95% of HF with genetic disorders as the main etiology. Most of them were diagnosed before 20 weeks of gestation, with worse prognosis than cases detected later in gestation. Rates of TOP, IUFD, and early neonatal death were higher in NIHF. Intrauterine therapy, when indicated, improved the perinatal outcome.

Keywords: Exome sequencing; Fetal therapy; Genetic testing; Hydrops fetalis; Prognostic factors.

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