Selection of Standards for Sonographic Fetal Femur Length by Use of z-scores

Author:

Combs C Andrew12,Del Rosario Amber2,Ashimi Balogun Olaide3,Bowman Zachary S.4,Amara Sushma5

Affiliation:

1. Pediatrix Center for Research, Education, Quality & Safety, Pediatrix Medical Group, Sunrise, Florida

2. Obstetrix of San Jose, Campbell, California

3. Obstetrix Maternal-Fetal Medicine Specialists, Houston, Texas

4. Perinatal Associates of Sacramento, Sacramento, California

5. Eastside Maternal-Fetal Medicine Specialists, Bellevue, Washington

Abstract

Objectives This study aimed to evaluate which of four established norms should be used for sonographic assessment of fetal femur length (FL). Study Design Cross-sectional study using pooled data from four maternal–fetal medicine practices. Inclusion criteria were singleton fetus, gestational age (GA) 220/7 to 396/7 weeks, biometry measured, and fetal cardiac activity present. Four norms of FL were studied: Hadlock et al, the INTERGROWTH-21st Project (IG-21st), the World Health Organization Fetal Growth Curves (WHO), and the National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development Fetal Growth Studies, unified standard (NICHD-U). The fit of our FL measurements to each norm was assessed by these criteria: mean z-score close to 0, standard deviation (SD) of z close to 1, Kolmogorov–Smirnov D-statistic close to zero, Youden J-statistic close to 1, approximately 5% of exams <5th percentile, and approximately 5% of exams >95th percentile. Results In 26,177 ultrasound exams, our FL measurements had the best fit to the WHO standard (mean z-score 0.15, SD of z 1.02, D-statistic <0.01, J-statistic 0.95, 3.4% of exams <5th percentile, 7.0% of exams >95th percentile). The mean of the IG-21st standard was smaller than the other norms and smaller than our measurements, resulting in underdiagnosis of short FL. The mean of the Hadlock reference was larger than the other norms and larger than our measurements, resulting in overdiagnosis of short FL. The SD of the NICHD-U standard was larger than the other norms and larger than our observations, resulting in underdiagnosis of both short and long FL. Restricting the analysis to a subgroup of 7,144 low-risk patients without risk factors for large- or small-for- GA produced similar results. Conclusion Of the norms studied, the WHO standard is likely best for diagnosis of abnormal FL. Key Points

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference49 articles.

1. AIUM-ACR-ACOG-SMFM-SRU practice parameter for the performance of standard diagnostic obstetric ultrasound examinations;J Ultrasound Med,2018

2. ISUOG Practice Guidelines: ultrasound assessment of fetal biometry and growth;L J Salomon;Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol,2019

3. The femur too short? 1373 fetuses with short femur during second-trimester screening;U Friebe-Hoffmann;Arch Gynecol Obstet,2022

4. Association of isolated short femur in the mid-trimester fetus with perinatal outcome;B Weisz;Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol,2008

5. Outcome of fetuses with diagnosis of isolated short femur in the second half of pregnancy;J Morales-Roselló;ISRN Obstet Gynecol,2012

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