Abstract

Left ventricular shape alterations predict cardiovascular outcomes and have been observed in children born preterm and after fetal growth restriction (FGR). The aim was to investigate whether left ventricular shape is altered in adolescents born very preterm and if FGR has an additive effect. Adolescents born very preterm due to verified early-onset FGR and two control groups with birthweight appropriate for gestational age (AGA), born at similar gestational age and at term, respectively, underwent cardiac MRI. Principal component analysis was applied to find the modes of variation best explaining shape variability for end-diastole, end-systole, and for the combination of both, the latter indicative of function. Seventy adolescents were included (13-16years; 49% males). Sphericity was increased for preterm FGR versus term AGA for end-diastole (36[0-60] vs -42[-82-8]; p = 0.01) and the combined analysis (27[-23-94] vs -51[-119-11]; p = 0.01), as well as for preterm AGA versus term AGA for end-diastole (30[-56-115] vs -42[-82-8]; p = 0.04), for end-systole (57[-29-89] vs -30[-79-34]; p = 0.03), and the combined analysis (44[-50-145] vs -51[-119-11]; p = 0.02). No group differences were observed for left ventricular mass or ejection fraction (all p ≥ 0.33). Sphericity was increased after very preterm birth and exacerbated by early-onset FGR, indicating an additive effect to that of very preterm birth on left ventricular remodeling. Increased sphericity may be a prognostic biomarker of future cardiovascular disease in this cohort that as of yetshows no signs of cardiac dysfunction using standard clinical measurements.

Full Text
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