Author:
Nakao Masahiro,Kuwabara Masanari,Saito Mika,Horiuchi Chinami,Morisaki Hiroko,Kishiki Kanako,Hamamichi Yuji,Orui Izumi,Ono Ryoko,Suzuki Ryo,Izawa Miho,Maeda Yoshiki,Ohmori Azumi,Uyeda Tomomi,Yazaki Satoshi,Yoshikawa Tadahiro,Wada Naoki,Hosoda Toru,Nii Masafumi,Tanaka Kayo,Tanaka Hiroaki,Kondo Eiji,Takahashi Yukihiro,Ikeda Tomoaki
Abstract
AbstractThe prenatal diagnosis of fetal heart disease potentially influences parental decision-making regarding pregnancy termination. Existing literature indicates that the severity, whether in complexity or lethality, significantly influences parental decisions concerning abortion. However, questions remain as to how fetal heart disease severity impacts parental decisions, given recent advancements in postsurgical outcomes. Therefore, we investigated risk factors associated with parents’ decision-making regarding abortion following a prenatal diagnosis of fetal heart disease. Our analysis included 73 (terminated: n = 37; continued: n = 36) pregnancies with a fetal heart disease diagnosed before 22 weeks of gestation. Increased gestational age at diagnosis reduced the likelihood of parents’ decision on termination (Model 1: adjusted odds ratio, 0.94; 95% confidence interval 0.89–0.99; Model 2: 0.95 0.90–0.997). Critical disease (5.25; 1.09–25.19) and concurrent extracardiac or genetic abnormalities (Model 1: 4.19, 1.21–14.53; Model 2: 5.47, 1.50–19.96) increased the likelihood of choosing abortion. Notably, complex disease did not significantly influence parental decisions (0.56; 0.14–2.20). These results suggest that parental decision-making regarding abortion may be influenced by earlier gestational age at diagnosis, the lethality of heart disease, and extracardiac or genetic abnormalities, but not its complexity if prenatal diagnosis and parental counseling are provided at a cardiovascular-specialized facility.
Funder
Sakakibara Internal Research Grant for Promotion of Sciences, 2022
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC