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Early pregnancy growth determines low birth weight [Meeting Abstract]
Bukowski, R; Smith, GCS; Malone, FD; Ball, RH; Comstock, C; Nyberg, DA; Hankins, G; Berkowitz, RL; Gross, SJ; Dugoff, L; Craigo, SD; Timor, IE; Carr, S; Wolfe, HM; D'Alton, ME
ISI:000242834500643
ISSN: 0002-9378
CID: 71058
Re: fetal magnetic resonance imaging: luxury or necessity? [Letter]
Timor-Tritsch, I
PMID: 17016865
ISSN: 0960-7692
CID: 76484
Pregnancy loss rates after midtrimester amniocentesis
Eddleman, Keith A; Malone, Fergal D; Sullivan, Lisa; Dukes, Kim; Berkowitz, Richard L; Kharbutli, Yara; Porter, T Flint; Luthy, David A; Comstock, Christine H; Saade, George R; Klugman, Susan; Dugoff, Lorraine; Craigo, Sabrina D; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E; Carr, Stephen R; Wolfe, Honor M; D'Alton, Mary E
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to quantify the contemporary procedure-related loss rate after midtrimester amniocentesis using a database generated from patients who were recruited to the First And Second Trimester Evaluation of Risk for Aneuploidy trial. METHODS: A total of 35,003 unselected patients from the general population with viable singleton pregnancies were enrolled in the First And Second Trimester Evaluation of Risk for Aneuploidy trial between 10 3/7 and 13 6/7 weeks gestation and followed up prospectively for complete pregnancy outcome information. Patients who either did (study group, n=3,096) or did not (control group, n=31,907) undergo midtrimester amniocentesis were identified from the database. The rate of fetal loss less than 24 weeks of gestation was compared between the two groups, and multiple logistic regression analysis was used to adjust for potential confounders. RESULTS: The spontaneous fetal loss rate less than 24 weeks of gestation in the study group was 1.0% and was not statistically different from the background 0.94% rate seen in the control group (P=.74, 95% confidence interval -0.26%, 0.49%). The procedure-related loss rate after amniocentesis was 0.06% (1.0% minus the background rate of 0.94%). Women undergoing amniocentesis were 1.1 times more likely to have a spontaneous loss (95% confidence interval 0.7-1.5). CONCLUSION: The procedure-related fetal loss rate after midtrimester amniocentesis performed on patients in a contemporary prospective clinical trial was 0.06%. There was no significant difference in loss rates between those undergoing amniocentesis and those not undergoing amniocentesis. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II-2
PMID: 17077226
ISSN: 0029-7844
CID: 76483
Comparison of serum markers in first-trimester down syndrome screening
Canick, Jacob A; Lambert-Messerlian, Geralyn M; Palomaki, Glenn E; Neveux, Louis M; Malone, Fergal D; Ball, Robert H; Nyberg, David A; Comstock, Christine H; Bukowski, Radek; Saade, George R; Berkowitz, Richard L; Dar, Pe'er; Dugoff, Lorraine; Craigo, Sabrina D; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E; Carr, Stephen R; Wolfe, Honor M; D'Alton, Mary E
OBJECTIVE: To estimate patterns of total hCG and inhibin A levels in the late first trimester of Down syndrome pregnancies, compare them with that of free beta-hCG, and assess screening performance of these markers individually and in combination with pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A (PAPP-A) and nuchal translucency. METHODS: Seventy-nine matched case-control sets of maternal serum samples (each Down syndrome case matched to 5 controls) from 11 through 13 completed weeks of gestation were taken from the sample bank of the First and Second Trimester Evaluation of Risk Consortium, a population-based study, and assayed for levels of free beta-hCG, total hCG, and inhibin A. Distribution characteristics and correlations of the multiples of the median values were estimated in cases and controls. Screening performance for each marker, alone and in combination with PAPP-A, nuchal translucency, and maternal age, was calculated. RESULTS: Median multiples of the median levels of free beta-hCG, total hCG, and inhibin A in cases were more elevated as gestation increased from 11 to 13 weeks, with univariate detection rates of 31%, 23%, and 29%, respectively, at a 5% false-positive rate. At 12 weeks, the multivariate detection rates at a 5% false-positive rate for nuchal translucency and PAPP-A (with maternal age) with either free beta-hCG, total hCG, or inhibin A were 84%, 83%, and 85%, respectively. The improvement in performance from nuchal translucency and PAPP-A to any of the three-marker tests was significant, while performance of any of the three-marker combinations was not significantly different from each other. CONCLUSION: Although levels of free beta-hCG in affected pregnancies were higher earlier than the levels of either total hCG or inhibin A, there was no significant difference in screening performance when either of the three markers was used with nuchal translucency and PAPP-A at 11-13 weeks of pregnancy. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II-2
PMID: 17077242
ISSN: 0029-7844
CID: 76482
Two- and 3-dimensional sonographic diagnosis of a vesicorectal fistula in cloacal dysgenesis sequence [Case Report]
Dulay, Antonette T; Schwartz, Nadav; Laser, Alice; Greco, M Alba; Monteagudo, Ana; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E
PMID: 17060441
ISSN: 0278-4297
CID: 73011
Is there a nuchal translucency millimeter measurement above which there is no added benefit from first trimester serum screening?
Comstock, Christine H; Malone, Fergal D; Ball, Robert H; Nyberg, David A; Saade, George R; Berkowitz, Richard L; Ferreira, Jose; Dugoff, Lorraine; Craigo, Sabrina D; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E; Carr, Stephen R; Wolfe, Honor M; Bianchi, Diana W; D'Alton, Mary E
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether there is a nuchal translucency (NT) measurement, independent of gestational age, above which immediate diagnostic testing should be offered without waiting for first trimester serum markers. STUDY DESIGN: Thirty-six thousand one hundred twenty patients had successful measurement of simple NT at 10 3/7 to 13 6/7 weeks and had first trimester serum screening. No risks were reported until second trimester serum screening was completed. RESULTS: Thirty-two patients (0.09%) had NT > or = 4.0 mm; the lowest combined first trimester trisomy 21 risk assessment in euploid cases was 1 in 8 and among aneuploidy cases was 7 in 8. One hundred twenty-eight patients (0.3%) had simple NT > or = 3.0 mm: the lowest combined first trimester trisomy 21 risk assessment of any patient in this group was 1 in 1479 and the lowest risk assessment among aneuploid cases was 1 in 2. Ten patients (8%) had first trimester trisomy 21 risk assessments lowered to less that 1:200 and none of these 10 cases had an abnormal outcome. CONCLUSION: During first trimester Down syndrome screening, whenever an NT measurement of 3.0 mm or greater is obtained there is minimal benefit in waiting for serum screening results, and no benefit for NT of 4.0 mm or greater. Differentiation between cystic hygroma and enlarged simple NT (> or = 3.0 mm) is now a moot point as both are sufficiently high risk situations to warrant immediate CVS
PMID: 16949423
ISSN: 1097-6868
CID: 76485
First- and second-trimester Down syndrome screening markers in pregnancies achieved through assisted reproductive technologies (ART): a FASTER trial study
Lambert-Messerlian, G; Dugoff, L; Vidaver, J; Canick, J A; Malone, F D; Ball, R H; Comstock, C H; Nyberg, D A; Saade, G; Eddleman, K; Klugman, S; Craigo, S D; Timor-Tritsch, I E; Carr, S R; Wolfe, H M; D'Alton, M E
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether first- and second-trimester Down syndrome screening markers and screen-positive rates are altered in pregnancies conceived using assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). METHODS: ART pregnancies in the multicenter FASTER trial were identified. Marker levels were evaluated for five types of ART: in vitro fertilization with ovulation induction (IVF-OI), IVF with OI and egg donation (IVF-OI-ED), IVF with ED (IVF-ED), and intrauterine insemination with OI (IUI-OI) or without OI (IUI). Each group was compared to non-ART controls using Mann-Whitney U analysis. RESULTS: First-trimester marker levels were not significantly different between ART and control pregnancies, with the exception of reduced PAPP-A levels in the IUI-OI group. In contrast, second-trimester inhibin A levels were increased in all ART pregnancies, estriol was reduced and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) was increased in IVF and IUI pregnancies without ED, and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) was increased in ED pregnancies. Second-trimester screen-positive rates were significantly higher than expected for ART pregnancies, except when ED was used. CONCLUSIONS: These data show that ART significantly impacts second-, but not first-, trimester markers and screen-positive rates. The type of adjustment needed in second-trimester screening depends on the particular type of ART used
PMID: 16764012
ISSN: 0197-3851
CID: 76487
Real-time and 3-dimensional sonographic diagnosis of postural congenital genu recurvatum [Case Report]
Monteagudo, Ana; Kudla, Marek M; Essig, Mitchell; Santos, Rosalba; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E
PMID: 16870903
ISSN: 0278-4297
CID: 76486
Schizencephaly in a dysgenetic fetal brain: prenatal sonographic, magnetic resonance imaging, and postmortem correlation [Case Report]
Huang, William M; Monteagudo, Ana; Bennett, Genevieve L; Fowkes, Mary E; Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E
PMID: 16567448
ISSN: 0278-4297
CID: 66250
As technology evolves, so should its application: shortcomings of the "18-week anatomy scan" [Editorial]
Timor-Tritsch, Ilan E
PMID: 16567429
ISSN: 0278-4297
CID: 76488