Abstract

Advances in prenatal ultrasound have revealed the poor natural history of fetal congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) and its hidden mortality during gestation and immediately after birth. Attempts to improve this poor outcome led to the development of prenatal surgical intervention for severe CDH by Harrison and his colleagues at the University of California San Francisco. Prenatal surgical intervention for CDH has seen four phases: open fetal surgical repair, open surgical tracheal occlusion, endoscopic external tracheal occlusion, and endoscopic endoluminal tracheal occlusion. After extensive work in the laboratory, prenatal intervention has been applied in humans since 1984. With the most recent techniques, maternal risk is significantly reduced as is the incidence of preterm labor. In the meantime, the survival rate of fetuses with CDH without fetal intervention has improved mainly due to the minimization of iatrogenic lung injury by gentle ventilation, first described in 1985. However, the morbidity of the survivors with severe CDH remains high. Prenatal intervention for CDH will be justified if improvement in survival or morbidity can be demonstrated when compared to planned delivery and postnatal management with gentle ventilation strategy.

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