Fetal intestinal loop dilatation: Follow‐up and outcome of a series of 133 consecutive cases (the DILDIG study)

Author:

Mangione Raphaële123,Voirin‐Mathieu Etienne4,Yvert Marianne125,Fries Nicolas1,Mousty Eve26,Castaigne Vanina27,Muller Françoise24,Dreux Sophie24ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Collège Français d’Echographie Fœtale CFEF Paris France

2. Fédération Française des Centres Pluridisciplinaires de Diagnostic Prénatal Paris France

3. Imagerie de la Femme Polyclinique Bordeaux Nord Aquitaine Bordeaux France

4. Biochimie Foetale Hôpital Robert Debré DMU BioGeM AP‐HP Paris France

5. Diagnostic Prénatal Maison de Santé Protestante Bagatelle Talence France

6. Gynécologie Obstétrique CPDPN CHU Nimes Nimes France

7. Gynécologie Obstétrique, Hôpital Intercommunal de Créteil Créteil France

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo define the prognostic markers of fetal dilated bowel loops.MethodsNational non‐interventional study of 133 consecutive prenatal observations of dilated loops including ultrasound examinations, complementary laboratory tests, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), outcomes, and postnatal diagnosis.ResultsOne hundred twenty seven cases were classified according to outcome: Group 1, very severe (n = 43), Group 2, children needing specific care (n = 39), and Group 3, healthy children (n = 45). Prenatal ultrasound scan suggested duodenal obstruction in 30 cases, small bowel obstruction in 81, colonic obstruction in 11, and diffuse dilatation in 5. Diameter of dilated loops did not significantly differ between the groups. A poor prognosis was significantly associated with duodenal obstruction, genetic anomalies (53% vs. 21.8%), including aneuploidies or CFTR gene mutations and abnormal amniotic fluid biochemistry (86.4% vs. 38.7%). A good prognosis was associated with regression of dilatation and normal MRI.ConclusionIn this study, postnatal outcomes for fetuses with intestinal dilatation were best predicted by assessing the level of obstruction with prenatal ultrasound and MRI, determining the presence of associated malformations, amniotic fluid biochemical and genetic testing, and monitoring for regression of bowel dilatation. These results should help inform future guidelines on the prenatal and neonatal management of congenital intestinal obstruction.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Obstetrics and Gynecology

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