Subscribe to RSS
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1637764
Predicting the Future: Delivery Room Planning of Congenital Heart Disease Diagnosed by Fetal Echocardiography
Publication History
Publication Date:
25 April 2018 (online)
Abstract
Advances in prenatal imaging have improved the examination of the fetal cardiovascular system. Fetal echocardiography facilitates the prenatal diagnosis of congenital heart disease (CHD) and through sequential examination, allows assessment of fetal cardiac hemodynamics, predicting the evolution of anatomical and functional cardiovascular abnormalities in utero and during the transition to a postnatal circulation at delivery. This approach allows detailed diagnosis with prenatal counseling and enables planning to define perinatal management, selecting the fetuses at a risk of postnatal hemodynamic instability who are likely to require a specialized delivery plan. The prenatal diagnosis and management of critical neonatal CHD has been shown to play an important role in improving the outcome of newborns with these conditions, allowing timely stabilization of the circulation prior to cardiac intervention or surgery, thus reducing the risk of perioperative morbidity and mortality. Diagnostic protocols aimed at risk-stratifying severity and potential postnatal compromise in fetuses with CHD have been developed to identify those who may require special intervention at birth or within the first days of life. In addition, new methodologies are being studied to improve the accuracy of prediction of disease severity. Perinatal management of neonates with a prenatal diagnosis of CHD requires a close collaboration between obstetric, neonatal, and cardiology services. In this article, the management of fetuses with CHD will be discussed, along with summarizing the in utero and fetal echocardiographic findings used for risk stratification of newborns with CHD and reviewing the basic principles used for planning for neonatal resuscitation and initial transitional care of these complex newborns.
-
References
- 1 Donofrio MT, Levy RJ, Schuette JJ. , et al. Specialized delivery room planning for fetuses with critical congenital heart disease. Am J Cardiol 2013; 111 (05) 737-747
- 2 Donofrio MT, Skurow-Todd K, Berger JT. , et al. Risk-stratified postnatal care of newborns with congenital heart disease determined by fetal echocardiography. J Am Soc Echocardiogr 2015; 28 (11) 1339-1349
- 3 Berkley EM, Goens MB, Karr S, Rappaport V. Utility of fetal echocardiography in postnatal management of infants with prenatally diagnosed congenital heart disease. Prenat Diagn 2009; 29 (07) 654-658
- 4 Pruetz JD, Carroll C, Trento LU. , et al. Outcomes of critical congenital heart disease requiring emergent neonatal cardiac intervention. Prenat Diagn 2014; 34 (12) 1127-1132
- 5 Brown KL, Sullivan ID. Prenatal detection for major congenital heart disease: a key process measure for congenital heart networks. Heart 2014; 100 (05) 359-360
- 6 Trines J, Hornberger LK. Evolution of heart disease in utero. Pediatr Cardiol 2004; 25 (03) 287-298
- 7 Holland BJ, Myers JA, Woods Jr CR. Prenatal diagnosis of critical congenital heart disease reduces risk of death from cardiovascular compromise prior to planned neonatal cardiac surgery: a meta-analysis. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol 2015; 45 (06) 631-638
- 8 Costello JM, Polito A, Brown DW. , et al. Birth before 39 weeks' gestation is associated with worse outcomes in neonates with heart disease. Pediatrics 2010; 126 (02) 277-284
- 9 Peyvandi S, Nguyen TA, Almeida-Jones M. , et al; University of California Fetal Consortium (UCfC). Timing and mode of delivery in prenatally diagnosed congenital heart disease - an analysis of practices within the University of California Fetal Consortium (UCfC). Pediatr Cardiol 2017; 38 (03) 588-595
- 10 Donofrio MT, Moon-Grady AJ, Hornberger LK. , et al; American Heart Association Adults With Congenital Heart Disease Joint Committee of the Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young and Council on Clinical Cardiology, Council on Cardiovascular Surgery and Anesthesia, and Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing. Diagnosis and treatment of fetal cardiac disease: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association. Circulation 2014; 129 (21) 2183-2242
- 11 Szwast A, Tian Z, McCann M, Donaghue D, Rychik J. Vasoreactive response to maternal hyperoxygenation in the fetus with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Circ Cardiovasc Imaging 2010; 3 (02) 172-178
- 12 Moon-Grady AJ, Morris SA, Belfort M. , et al; International Fetal Cardiac Intervention Registry. International Fetal Cardiac Intervention Registry: a worldwide collaborative description and preliminary outcomes. J Am Coll Cardiol 2015; 66 (04) 388-399
- 13 Ganesan S, Brook MM, Silverman NH, Moon-Grady AJ. Prenatal findings in total anomalous pulmonary venous return: a diagnostic road map starts with obstetric screening views. J Ultrasound Med 2014; 33 (07) 1193-1207
- 14 Channing A, Szwast A, Natarajan S, Degenhardt K, Tian Z, Rychik J. Maternal hyperoxygenation improves left heart filling in fetuses with atrial septal aneurysm causing impediment to left ventricular inflow. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol 2015; 45 (06) 664-669
- 15 Schidlow DN, Donofrio MT. Prenatal maternal hyperoxygenation testing and implications for critical care delivery planning among fetuses with congenital heart disease: early experience. Am J Perinatol 2018; 35 (01) 16-23
- 16 Saul D, Degenhardt K, Iyoob SD. , et al. Hypoplastic left heart syndrome and the nutmeg lung pattern in utero: a cause and effect relationship or prognostic indicator?. Pediatr Radiol 2016; 46 (04) 483-489
- 17 Chelliah A, Berger JT, Blask A, Donofrio MT. Clinical utility of fetal magnetic resonance imaging in tetralogy of Fallot with absent pulmonary valve. Circulation 2013; 127 (06) 757-759