Measurement of femur length (FL) has been advocated as part of a genetic sonogram for the prediction of Down syndrome (DS). However its predictive ability has been inconsistent. We have studied the diagnostic value of this sonographic parameter in a prospective cohort of women with singleton gestations undergoing genetic sonogram between 14 and 22 weeks because of advanced maternal age or family history of aneuploidies. Genetic sonograms were performed at a mean gestational age of 17.0 weeks (range 14-22). DS was diagnosed in 30 fetuses, while 888 were euploid. Mean+/-SD observed/expected (O/E) values of FL (1.00+/-0.10 versus 0.97+/-0.01, p=0.07) were not significantly different between euploid and DS fetuses. Comparison of the regression equations of FL versus biparietal diameter revealed that while the intercepts were not significantly different between euploid and DS fetuses, the difference in slopes reached significance (p=0.04) suggesting that the predictive ability of FL may increase with advancing gestational age. In addition, a MEDLINE search (National Library of Medicine) was conducted for articles published between 1985 and 1998 on fetal femur length in the prediction of trisomy 21. Review of the published literature on the subject suggests that FL is not a consistent or reliable sonographic predictor of DS. Published thresholds of FL should not be used outside of the Institution from which they originated, and each Institution should establish whether this parameter has predictive ability in its own population.

Vergani, P., Locatelli, A., Piccoli, M., Mariani, E., Strobelt, N., Pezzullo, J., et al. (2000). Critical reappraisal of the utility of sonographic fetal femur length in the prediction of trisomy 21. PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS, 20(3), 210-214 [10.1002/(SICI)1097-0223(200003)20:3<210::AID-PD784>3.0.CO;2-4].

Critical reappraisal of the utility of sonographic fetal femur length in the prediction of trisomy 21

VERGANI, PATRIZIA;LOCATELLI, ANNA;
2000

Abstract

Measurement of femur length (FL) has been advocated as part of a genetic sonogram for the prediction of Down syndrome (DS). However its predictive ability has been inconsistent. We have studied the diagnostic value of this sonographic parameter in a prospective cohort of women with singleton gestations undergoing genetic sonogram between 14 and 22 weeks because of advanced maternal age or family history of aneuploidies. Genetic sonograms were performed at a mean gestational age of 17.0 weeks (range 14-22). DS was diagnosed in 30 fetuses, while 888 were euploid. Mean+/-SD observed/expected (O/E) values of FL (1.00+/-0.10 versus 0.97+/-0.01, p=0.07) were not significantly different between euploid and DS fetuses. Comparison of the regression equations of FL versus biparietal diameter revealed that while the intercepts were not significantly different between euploid and DS fetuses, the difference in slopes reached significance (p=0.04) suggesting that the predictive ability of FL may increase with advancing gestational age. In addition, a MEDLINE search (National Library of Medicine) was conducted for articles published between 1985 and 1998 on fetal femur length in the prediction of trisomy 21. Review of the published literature on the subject suggests that FL is not a consistent or reliable sonographic predictor of DS. Published thresholds of FL should not be used outside of the Institution from which they originated, and each Institution should establish whether this parameter has predictive ability in its own population.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Ultrasonography, Prenatal; Humans; Gestational Age; Adult; Middle Aged; Down Syndrome; Femur; Female; Pregnancy
English
mar-2000
20
3
210
214
none
Vergani, P., Locatelli, A., Piccoli, M., Mariani, E., Strobelt, N., Pezzullo, J., et al. (2000). Critical reappraisal of the utility of sonographic fetal femur length in the prediction of trisomy 21. PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS, 20(3), 210-214 [10.1002/(SICI)1097-0223(200003)20:3<210::AID-PD784>3.0.CO;2-4].
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/37722
Citazioni
  • Scopus 20
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 15
Social impact