AI Article Synopsis

  • Congenital heart defects (CHDs) are the most common birth defects, and a national screening program in China identified 18,171 cases among over 2.4 million pregnancies, resulting in a national incidence rate of 7.4 per 1,000 pregnancies.
  • The most frequently detected defect was ventricular septal defect at 17.04%, with significant occurrences of tetralogy of Fallot, and a majority of cases (76.24%) involved isolated intracardiac defects.
  • Prenatal echocardiography, combined with other diagnostic methods like ultrasound and cytogenetics, provides a comprehensive strategy for identifying CHDs, which could alleviate the financial and emotional impact on families.

Article Abstract

Background: Congenital heart defects (CHDs) are the most common birth defects. Assessment of the incidence, distribution, disease spectrum, and genetic deficits of fetal CHDs in China is urgently needed.

Methods: A national echocardiography screening program for fetal CHDs was implemented in 92 prenatal screening-diagnostic centers in China.

Findings: A total of 18,171 fetal CHD cases were identified from 2,452,249 pregnancies, resulting in 7·4/1,000 as the national incidence rate of fetal CHD. The incidences of fetal CHD in the six geographical regions, the southern, central, eastern, southwestern, northern, and northwestern, were 7·647 (CI: 7·383-7·915), 7·839 (CI: 7·680-8·000), 7·647 (CI: 7·383-7·915), 7·562 (CI: 7·225-7·907), 5·618 (CI: 5·337-5·906), and 4·716 (CI: 4·341-5·108), respectively, per 1,000 pregnancies. Overall, ventricular septal defect was the most common fetal CHD, accounting for 17.04% of screened pregnancies nationwide, and tetralogy of Fallot, the most common anomaly in the major defect of fetal CHD, was the second most common, accounting for 9.72%. A total of 76.24% cases of fetal CHD were found to be an isolated intracardiac single defect. The remaining 23.76% of cases of fetal CHD had multiple heart defects. Among all extracardiac malformations, the central nervous system (CNS) was the most common tissue with extracardiac anomalies associated with CHD, accounting for 22.89% of fetal CHD cases. Chromosomal karyotyping identified trisomy 18 as the most common chromosomal abnormality in fetal CHD. We also documented that CHD-containing syndromes could be identified with a comprehensive approach integrating prenatal ultrasound, MRI, pathological autopsy, and cytogenetics and molecular genetics.

Conclusion: Implementation of prenatal echocardiography as a practically feasible platform to screen fetal CHD will reduce the financial and emotional burden of CHD, which may facilitate intrauterine and neonatal intervention of CHD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10731863PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13578-023-01172-7DOI Listing

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