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Current use and performance of the different fetal growth charts in the Italian population

Stampalija T.
•
Ghi T.
•
Rosolen V.
altro
Frusca T.
2020
  • journal article

Periodico
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS, GYNECOLOGY, AND REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Abstract
Objectives: The choice of growth charts impacts on screening, diagnosis and clinical management of fetal growth abnormalities. The objectives of the study were to evaluate: 1) the clinical practice at a national level among tertiary referral centers in the use of fetal biometric growth charts; and 2) the impact on fetal growth screening of existing national and international growth charts. Study design: A questionnaire was sent to 14 Italian tertiary referral centers to explore biometric reference growth charts used in clinical practice. National and international (Intergrowth-21st and World Health Organization) fetal growth charts were tested on a large national cohort of low risk women with singleton uneventful pregnancy derived from a retrospective cross-sectional multicenter study (21 centers). The percentage of fetuses with biometric measurements below and above the 10th and 90th percentile for each biometric parameter and gestational week were calculated for each growth chart. The percentile curves of the study population were calculated by non-linear quantile regressions. Results: Twelve Italian centers (86 %) answered to the questionnaire showing a wide discrepancy in the use of growth charts for fetal biometry. The cohort included 7347 pregnant women. By applying Intergrowth-21st growth charts the percentage of fetuses with head circumference, abdominal circumference and femur length below the 10th centile was 3.9 %, 3.6 % and 2.3 %, and above the 90th centile 29.9 %, 32.5 % and 46 %, respectively. The percentages for the World Health Organization growth charts for head and abdominal circumferences and femur length were: below the 10th centile 6.3 %, 7.2 % and 5.3 %, and above 90th centile 22.8 %, 21.3 % and 31.9 %, respectively. Conclusions: The wide discrepancy in clinical use of fetal growth charts in Italian centers warrants the adoption of an uniform set of charts. Our data suggest that immediate application into clinical practice of international growth charts might result into an under-diagnosis of small for gestational age fetuses and, especially, in an over-diagnosis of large for gestational age fetuses with major consequences for clinical practice. On these grounds, there is an urgent need for a nationwide study for the prospective evaluation of international growth charts and, if needed, the construction and adoption of methodologically robust national growth charts.
DOI
10.1016/j.ejogrb.2020.06.059
WOS
WOS:000573032200010
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/11368/2974444
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-85087704666
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301211520304346?via=ihub
Diritti
open access
license:copyright editore
license:digital rights management non definito
FVG url
https://arts.units.it/request-item?handle=11368/2974444
Soggetti
  • Growth chart

  • Intergrowth-21

  • Large for gestational...

  • Small for gestational...

  • World health organiza...

Scopus© citazioni
6
Data di acquisizione
Jun 7, 2022
Vedi dettagli
Web of Science© citazioni
13
Data di acquisizione
Mar 25, 2024
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