Abstract

To assess differences in mode of delivery and pregnancy outcome between prenatally detected and nonprenatally detected small for gestational age (SGA) neonates born at term. We performed a retrospective multicenter cohort study. All singleton infants, born SGA in cephalic position between 36(0/7) and 41(0/7) weeks gestation, were classified as either prenatally detected SGA or nonprenatally detected SGA. With propensity score matching we created groups with comparable baseline characteristics. We compared these groups for composite adverse perinatal outcome, labor induction, and cesarean section rates. We included 718 SGA infants, of whom 555 (77%) were not prenatally detected. Composite adverse neonatal outcome did not differ statistically significant between the matched prenatally detected and the nonprenatally detected group (5.5 vs. 7.4%, odds ratio [OR] 0.74, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.30-1.8). However, perinatal mortality only occurred in the nonprenatally detected group (1.8% [3/163] in the matched cohort, 1.3% [7/555] in the complete cohort). In the propensity matched prenatally detected SGA group both induction of labor (57 vs. 9%, OR 14.0, 95% CI: 7.4-26.2) and cesarean sections (20 vs. 8%, OR 2.9, 95% CI: 1.5-5.8) were more often performed compared with the nonprenatally detected SGA group. Prenatal SGA detection at term allows timely induction of labor and cesarean sections thus potentially preventing stillbirth.

Highlights

  • MethodsStudy Design We conducted a retrospective cohort study of women with a singleton small for gestational age (SGA) child born at home or in the hospital between 360/7 and 410/7 weeks of gestation, between 1 April, 2005 and 31 December, 2008

  • Some of the authors of this publication are working on these related projects: Pre-Eclampsia Intervention with Esomeprazole (PIE) trial: a double blind randomised control trial to treat early onset pre-eclampsia View project Prognostic models in obstetrics View project

  • Small for gestational age (SGA) neonates are defined as neonates with a birth weight below the 10th percentile of the growth curve for a given gestational age (GA)

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Summary

Methods

Study Design We conducted a retrospective cohort study of women with a singleton SGA child born at home or in the hospital between 360/7 and 410/7 weeks of gestation, between 1 April, 2005 and 31 December, 2008. 18 years with a singleton pregnancy who gave birth to SGA neonates at a GA between 360/7 and 410/7 weeks in the catchment area of one of the following two hospitals and seven midwifery practices: the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam, the Maxima Medical Center in Veldhoven, or one of the seven independent midwifery practices referring to these two medical centers. To warrant comparability of pregnancies with an prenatally detected SGA and nonprenatally detected SGA infants, we excluded women with a breech presentation at birth, women with a child with fetal structural or chromosomal anomalies, women with a previous cesarean section, and women with pregnancies with uncertainty about duration of pregnancy Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria We included pregnant women ! 18 years with a singleton pregnancy who gave birth to SGA neonates at a GA between 360/7 and 410/7 weeks in the catchment area of one of the following two hospitals and seven midwifery practices: the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam, the Maxima Medical Center in Veldhoven, or one of the seven independent midwifery practices referring to these two medical centers.

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