Abstract

To evaluate longitudinal placental perfusion using pseudo-continuous arterial spin-labeled (pCASL) MRI in normal pregnancies and in pregnancies affected by chronic hypertension (cHTN), who are at the greatest risk for placental-mediated disease conditions. Eighteen normal and 23 pregnant subjects with cHTN requiring antihypertensive therapy were scanned at 3T using free-breathing pCASL-MRI at 16-20 and 24-28weeks of gestational age. Mean placental perfusion was 103.1 ± 48.0 and 71.4 ± 18.3mL/100g/min at 16-20 and 24-28weeks respectively in normal pregnancies and 79.4 ± 27.4 and 74.9 ± 26.6mL/100g/min in cHTN pregnancies. There was a significant decrease in perfusion between the first and second scans in normal pregnancies (p = 0.004), which was not observed in cHTN pregnancies (p = 0.36). The mean perfusion was not statistically different between normal and cHTN pregnancies at both scans, but the absolute change in perfusion per week was statistically different between these groups (p = 0.044). Furthermore, placental perfusion was significantly lower at both time points (p = 0.027 and 0.044 respectively) in the four pregnant subjects with cHTN who went on to have infants that were small for gestational age (52.7 ± 20.4 and 50.4 ± 20.9mL/100g/min) versus those who did not (85 ± 25.6 and 80.0 ± 25.1mL/100g/min). pCASL-MRI enables longitudinal assessment of placental perfusion in pregnant subjects. Placental perfusion in the second trimester declined in normal pregnancies whereas it remained unchanged in cHTN pregnancies, consistent with alterations due to vascular disease pathology. Perfusion was significantly lower in those with small for gestational age infants, indicating that pCASL-MRI-measured perfusion may be an effective imaging biomarker for placental insufficiency. pCASL-MRI enables longitudinal assessment of placental perfusion without administering exogenous contrast agent and can identify placental insufficiency in pregnant subjects with chronic hypertension that can lead to earlier interventions. • Arterial spin-labeled (ASL) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) enables longitudinal assessment of placental perfusion without administering exogenous contrast agent. • ASL-MRI-measured placental perfusion decreased significantly between 16-20 week and 24-28 week gestational age in normal pregnancies, while it remained relatively constant in hypertensive pregnancies, attributed to vascular disease pathology. • ASL-MRI-measured placental perfusion was significantly lower in subjects with hypertension who had a small for gestational age infant at 16-20-week gestation, indicating perfusion as an effective biomarker of placental insufficiency.

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