Objective To evaluate the potential of three-dimensional ultrasound to predict outcome in congenital diaphragmatic hernia. Design Prospective observational study.Setting Tertiary care centre.Population Twelve cases of isolated congenital diaphragmatic hernia (11 left-sided, 1 right-sided) and 109 controls. Methods Fetal lung volume was assessed by three-dimensional ultrasound using the technique of rotation of the multiplanar imaging. In the control fetuses, a logistic transformation was performed to correlate fetal lung volume with gestational age, and the confidence interval was obtained with a bootstrap resampling. A mathematical equation was then obtained allowing calculation of the expected fetal lung volume as a function of gestational age. In fetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia, the observed/expected lung volume ratio was compared with postnatal outcome. Main outcome measures Neonatal mortality and pulmonary hypoplasia, which was defined as lung/body weight ratios less than 0.012. The observed/expected fetal lung volume ratio was also correlated with the postmortem lung/body weight ratio. Conclusion In isolated congenital diaphragmatic hernia, fetal lung volume measurement by three-dimensional ultrasound is a potential predictor for pulmonary hypoplasia and postnatal outcome.
There is a good agreement between 3-dimensional ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging for fetal lung volume estimation in cases with congenital diaphragmatic hernia.
A new nomogram of fetal lung (right, left, and total) volumes throughout gestational age using the rotational technique (VOCAL) is described, and reference values have been generated.
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