Abstract

BackgroundCurrent clinical post-mortem imaging techniques do not provide sufficiently high-resolution imaging for smaller fetuses after pregnancy loss. Post-mortem micro-CT is a non-invasive technique that can deliver high diagnostic accuracy for these smaller fetuses. The purpose of the study is to identify the main predictors of image quality for human fetal post-mortem micro-CT imaging.MethodsHuman fetuses were imaged using micro-CT following potassium tri-iodide tissue preparation, and axial head and chest views were assessed for image quality on a Likert scale by two blinded radiologists. Simple and multivariable linear regression models were performed with demographic details, iodination, tissue maceration score and imaging parameters as predictor variables.Results258 fetuses were assessed, with median weight 41.7 g (2.6–350 g) and mean gestational age 16 weeks (11–24 weeks). A high image quality score (> 6.5) was achieved in 95% of micro-CT studies, higher for the head (median = 9) than chest (median = 8.5) imaging. The strongest negative predictors of image quality were increasing maceration and body weight (p < 0.001), with number of projections being the best positive imaging predictor.ConclusionsHigh micro-CT image quality score is achievable following early pregnancy loss despite fetal maceration, particularly in smaller fetuses where conventional autopsy may be particularly challenging. These findings will help establish clinical micro-CT imaging services, addressing the need for less invasive fetal autopsy methods.

Highlights

  • Current clinical post-mortem imaging techniques do not provide sufficiently high-resolution imaging for smaller fetuses after pregnancy loss

  • Conventional perinatal autopsy can determine a cause of death or diagnosis by identifying developmental abnormalities and reducing the discrepancy between the anteand post-mortem diagnosis [1]

  • The strongest negative predictor of final image quality was the extent of fetal maceration, with decreasing image quality associated with increasing body weight

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Summary

Introduction

Current clinical post-mortem imaging techniques do not provide sufficiently high-resolution imaging for smaller fetuses after pregnancy loss. Micro-CT is a technique that can achieve high resolution of anatomical structures [15,16,17,18,19] and with the addition of a potassium tri-iodide (­I2KI) contrast agent can provide detailed soft tissue imaging which can identify developmental abnormalities in early pregnancy where conventional autopsy is challenging [15, 16, 20,21,22,23,24]. Micro CT has been used to image human fetuses with high diagnostic accuracy [20, 25], but the optimal imaging parameters across a range of fetal size, gestation, and maceration and how these relate to image quality have. The aim of this study was to identify the strongest demographic or imaging-derived determinants of fetal post-mortem micro-CT imaging

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