Abstract
The objective of the study was to examine the prenatal anomalies in fetuses with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS). The study included a retrospective assessment of 12 pregnancies that were seen at three tertiary referral centres (Universities of Tübingen, Bonn, and Cologne/Germany). The genetic mutation, the results of the second trimester ultrasound examination, and the outcome of the pregnancies are shown. Biometric data were transformed into z-values. Median gestational age at the time of examination was 22.6 (range 19.0-29.7) weeks of gestation. In all cases, the head circumference (HC) and the femur length (FL) were within the normal range, but the HC-FL ratio was above the 95th centile in 75% of the cases. An exomphalos, macroglossia, and visceromegaly were observed in 67%, 50%, and 83% of the cases, and in 58% and 83%, there were polyhydramnios and placentamegaly respectively. The fetal pancreas was identified in three quarters of the cases. A third of the women had large, overstimulation-like ovaries, although each pregnancy was conceived naturally. In four cases, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) levels were measured and mean hCG levels were 498 106 IU/L. Besides exomphalos, BWS should be considered if there is macroglossia, a distinct growth pattern, pancreatic hyperplasia, placentamegaly, and substantially increased levels of beta-hCG. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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