Abstract

The goal of our study was to analyze the fetal renal pelvic diameters measured sonographically at several gestational intervals in live-born neonates subsequently found to have either obstructive uropathy or normal kidneys. This information will improve the efficacy of sonography in the diagnosis of obstructive uropathy. From an ongoing prospective study assessing the significance of fetal renal pelvic diameters of 4 mm or more at obstetric sonography, the findings in 29 obstructed kidneys in 24 babies were compared with the findings in 380 kidneys from 233 infants who had no obstruction. Twenty-three infants had unilateral obstruction of the ureteropelvic junction, two had unilateral renal obstruction at the ureterovesical junction, one had posterior urethral valves and in addition had both kidneys obstructed because of obstruction at the ureterovesical junction, one kidney was obstructed because of megaloureter, and one kidney was obstructed because of obstruction in a duplex collecting system. Obstruction was identified on nephrostograms, excretory urograms, or radionuclide renograms. The sonographic findings were compared at three gestational age ranges: 16-23 weeks' gestation, 24-30 weeks' gestation, and 31-40 weeks' gestation. The progression of pelvic dilatation in both groups (12 obstructed and 86 unobstructed) was analyzed for the subset of kidneys examined in all three time periods. At 16-23 weeks' gestation, the difference in mean pelvic diameter between obstructed and unobstructed kidneys was not statistically significant, but the difference between obstructed and unobstructed groups at 24-30 weeks' and 31-40 weeks' gestation was significant (p < .001). Renal pelvic diameter showed a much greater rise in diameter through pregnancy in the obstructed group than in the unobstructed group (p < .0003). The sensitivity of the cutoff point of 4-mm renal pelvic diameter for detecting obstruction was 76% before 23 weeks' gestation, including kidneys with a marked decrease in function postnatally; the sensitivity of a 10-mm cutoff point at 16-23 weeks' gestation was 12%. The likelihood that a fetus had renal obstruction increased with increasing diameter of the fetal renal pelvis in all three time periods. Kidneys with significant obstruction postnatally may have no dilatation of the renal pelvis before 23 weeks' gestation. Most obstructed kidneys had pelvic diameters of less than 10 mm before 23 weeks' gestation. During pregnancy, renal pelvic diameter increases at a greater rate in kidneys that later are shown to be obstructed than in those that are not obstructed.

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