First trimester anatomy ultrasound for patients with obesity: a randomized controlled trial.

Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM

Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX (Drs Buskmiller and Fishel Bartal, Mr Bonilla, Mses Denham and Nguyan, and Drs Sibai and Hernandez-Andrade).

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study compares the effectiveness of first-trimester and second-trimester ultrasounds for evaluating fetal anatomy in pregnant individuals with a body mass index of 35 kg/m or higher.* -
  • The randomized controlled trial involved 128 participants and found that the completion rate for first-trimester ultrasounds was 66%, whereas the second-trimester scans had a 53% completion rate.* -
  • Results suggest that first-trimester imaging may be more effective for this demographic, as it had better completion rates and required less follow-up, although further details on anomalies and other factors were also analyzed.*

Article Abstract

Background: Second-trimester ultrasound is the standard technique for fetal anatomy evaluation in the United States despite international guidelines and literature that suggest that first-trimester timing may be superior in patients with obesity. First-trimester imaging performs well in cohorts of participants with obesity.

Objective: Our aim was to compare the completion rate of a first-trimester fetal anatomy ultrasound scan with that of a second-trimester fetal anatomy ultrasound scan among pregnant people with a body mass index ≥35 kg/m.

Study Design: This randomized controlled trial enrolled participants with a body mass index ≥35 kg/m with a singleton gestation and who presented before 14+0/7 weeks of gestation. Participants were randomized to receive an ultrasound assessment of anatomy at either 12+0/7 to 13+6/7 weeks or at 18+0/7 to 22+6/7 weeks. The primary outcome was completion rate (percentage of scans that optimally imaged all the required fetal structures). Secondary outcomes included the necessity of a transvaginal approach, completion rates for each individual view, number of anomalies identified and missed in each group, scan duration, and patient perspectives. A 1-year pilot sample was analyzed using Bayesian methods for the primary outcome with a neutral prior and frequentist analyses for the remaining outcomes.

Results: A total of 128 participants were enrolled, and 1 withdrew consent; 62 subjects underwent a first-trimester ultrasound scan and 62 underwent a second-trimester ultrasound scan. A total of 2 participants did not attend the research visits, and 1 sought termination of pregnancy. In the first-trimester group, 66% (41/62) of ultrasound scans were completed in comparison with 53% (33/62) in the second-trimester ultrasound group (Bayesian relative risk, 1.20; 95% credible interval, 0.91-1.73). When compared with a second-trimester scan plus a follow-up ultrasound, a first-trimester ultrasound plus a second-trimester ultrasound was equally successful in completing the anatomy views (76%). First-trimester anatomy ultrasound scans required a transvaginal approach in 63% (39/62) of cases and had a longer duration than a second-trimester ultrasound scan. No anomalies were missed in either group. First-trimester ultrasound participants who responded to a survey described that they were very satisfied with the technique.

Conclusion: In pregnant subjects with a body mass index ≥35 kg/m, a single first-trimester anatomy ultrasound scan was more likely to obtain all the recommended anatomic views than a single second-trimester ultrasound scan. An evaluation of anatomy at 12+0/7 to 13+6/7 weeks' gestation plus an evaluation at 18+0/7 to 22+6/7 led to complete anatomic evaluation 4 weeks earlier than 2 second trimester scans. Assessment of ultrasound duration in a clinical setting is needed to ensure feasibility outside of a research setting.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajogmf.2023.101143DOI Listing

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