Mild-to-moderate renal pelvis dilatation identified during pregnancy and hospital admissions in childhood: An electronic birth cohort study in Wales, UK
Mild-to-moderate renal pelvis dilatation identified during pregnancy and hospital admissions in childhood: An electronic birth cohort study in Wales, UK
BACKGROUND: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a growing contributor to the global burden of noncommunicable diseases. Early diagnosis and treatment can reduce the severity of kidney damage and the need for dialysis or transplantation. It is not known whether mild-to-moderate renal pelvis dilatation (RPD) identified at 18-20 weeks gestation is an early indicator of renal pathology. The aim of this follow-up to the Welsh Study of Mothers and Babies was to assess the risk of hospital admission in children with mild-to-moderate antenatal RPD compared with children without this finding. We also examined how the natural history of the RPD (whether the dilatation persists in later pregnancy or postpartum) or its characteristics (unilateral versus bilateral) changed the risk of hospital admission.
METHODS/FINDINGS: This population-based cohort study included singleton babies born in Wales between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2011 (n = 22,045). We linked ultrasound scan data to routinely available data on hospital admissions from the Patient Episode Database for Wales (PEDW). The outcome was a hospital admission for urinary tract causes (defined by an expert study steering group) in the first three years of life. We used Cox regression to model time to first hospital admission, according to whether there was evidence of RPD at the fetal anomaly scan (FAS) and/or evidence of dilatation in later investigations, adjusting for other predictors of admission. We used multiple imputation with chained equations to impute values for missing data. We included 21,239 children in the analysis. The risk of at least one hospital admission was seven times greater in those with RPD (n = 138) compared with those without (n = 21,101, conditional hazard ratio [cHR] 7.23, 95% confidence interval [CI] 4.31-12.15, p < 0.001). The risk of hospital admission was higher in children with RPD at the FAS and later dilatation (cHR 25.13, 95% CI 13.26-47.64, p < 0.001) and in children without RPD at the FAS who had later dilatation (cHR 62.06, 95% CI 41.10-93.71, p < 0.001) than in children without RPD (n = 21,057). Among children with RPD at the FAS but no dilatation in later pregnancy or postpartum, we did not find an association with hospital admissions (cHR 2.16, 95% CI 0.69-6.75, p = 0.185), except when the initial dilatation was bilateral (cHR 4.77, 95% CI 1.17-19.47, p = 0.029). Limitations of the study include small numbers in subgroups (meaning that these results should be interpreted with caution), that less severe outcomes (such as urinary tract infections [UTIs] managed in the community or in outpatients) could not be included in our analysis, and that obtaining records of radiological investigations later in pregnancy and postpartum was challenging. Our conclusions were consistent after conducting sensitivity analyses to account for some of these limitations.
CONCLUSIONS: In this large population-based study, children with RPD at the FAS had higher rates of hospital admissions when there was persistent dilatation in later pregnancy or postpartum. Our results can be used to improve counselling of parents and develop care pathways for antenatal screening programmes, including protocols for reporting and further investigation of RPD.
Hurt, Lisa
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Wright, Melissa
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Demmler, Joanne
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VanDerVoort, Judith
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Morris, Susan
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Brook, Fiona
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Tucker, David
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Chapman, Maria
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Francis, Nick A.
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Daniel, Rhian
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Fone, David
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Brophy, Sinead
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Paranjothy, Shantini
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30 July 2019
Hurt, Lisa
95896c0d-415a-41da-98d4-2ea7c9b32cb7
Wright, Melissa
ddb1f163-3336-4721-bb94-2224dc91e001
Demmler, Joanne
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VanDerVoort, Judith
8c464302-6aed-4863-8a68-823562fd9834
Morris, Susan
25befade-574f-465a-b483-92b40efc56d8
Brook, Fiona
60aba4e2-2e90-4cf4-b855-798008c3489b
Tucker, David
e3a643e6-8dfb-402c-9e20-4e79bf604d39
Chapman, Maria
54196b72-c1b8-4304-940f-5a82a2f4180a
Francis, Nick A.
9b610883-605c-4fee-871d-defaa86ccf8e
Daniel, Rhian
f9090db9-bf99-4fb5-a96c-aadfad9814b5
Fone, David
3e99e3e2-47f0-4c91-835f-935ad51b9d8a
Brophy, Sinead
7ae6819d-c175-4ec1-8239-9c94978743fa
Paranjothy, Shantini
04acae3d-1dba-48ee-80e4-6f4b85cb8043
Hurt, Lisa, Wright, Melissa, Demmler, Joanne, VanDerVoort, Judith, Morris, Susan, Brook, Fiona, Tucker, David, Chapman, Maria, Francis, Nick A., Daniel, Rhian, Fone, David, Brophy, Sinead and Paranjothy, Shantini
(2019)
Mild-to-moderate renal pelvis dilatation identified during pregnancy and hospital admissions in childhood: An electronic birth cohort study in Wales, UK.
PLoS Medicine, 16 (7), [e1002859].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1002859).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a growing contributor to the global burden of noncommunicable diseases. Early diagnosis and treatment can reduce the severity of kidney damage and the need for dialysis or transplantation. It is not known whether mild-to-moderate renal pelvis dilatation (RPD) identified at 18-20 weeks gestation is an early indicator of renal pathology. The aim of this follow-up to the Welsh Study of Mothers and Babies was to assess the risk of hospital admission in children with mild-to-moderate antenatal RPD compared with children without this finding. We also examined how the natural history of the RPD (whether the dilatation persists in later pregnancy or postpartum) or its characteristics (unilateral versus bilateral) changed the risk of hospital admission.
METHODS/FINDINGS: This population-based cohort study included singleton babies born in Wales between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2011 (n = 22,045). We linked ultrasound scan data to routinely available data on hospital admissions from the Patient Episode Database for Wales (PEDW). The outcome was a hospital admission for urinary tract causes (defined by an expert study steering group) in the first three years of life. We used Cox regression to model time to first hospital admission, according to whether there was evidence of RPD at the fetal anomaly scan (FAS) and/or evidence of dilatation in later investigations, adjusting for other predictors of admission. We used multiple imputation with chained equations to impute values for missing data. We included 21,239 children in the analysis. The risk of at least one hospital admission was seven times greater in those with RPD (n = 138) compared with those without (n = 21,101, conditional hazard ratio [cHR] 7.23, 95% confidence interval [CI] 4.31-12.15, p < 0.001). The risk of hospital admission was higher in children with RPD at the FAS and later dilatation (cHR 25.13, 95% CI 13.26-47.64, p < 0.001) and in children without RPD at the FAS who had later dilatation (cHR 62.06, 95% CI 41.10-93.71, p < 0.001) than in children without RPD (n = 21,057). Among children with RPD at the FAS but no dilatation in later pregnancy or postpartum, we did not find an association with hospital admissions (cHR 2.16, 95% CI 0.69-6.75, p = 0.185), except when the initial dilatation was bilateral (cHR 4.77, 95% CI 1.17-19.47, p = 0.029). Limitations of the study include small numbers in subgroups (meaning that these results should be interpreted with caution), that less severe outcomes (such as urinary tract infections [UTIs] managed in the community or in outpatients) could not be included in our analysis, and that obtaining records of radiological investigations later in pregnancy and postpartum was challenging. Our conclusions were consistent after conducting sensitivity analyses to account for some of these limitations.
CONCLUSIONS: In this large population-based study, children with RPD at the FAS had higher rates of hospital admissions when there was persistent dilatation in later pregnancy or postpartum. Our results can be used to improve counselling of parents and develop care pathways for antenatal screening programmes, including protocols for reporting and further investigation of RPD.
Text
journal.pmed.1002859
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 June 2019
Published date: 30 July 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 436424
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436424
ISSN: 1549-1277
PURE UUID: c5bd4156-91a8-4011-82d5-50d051d02110
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Date deposited: 10 Dec 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:58
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Contributors
Author:
Lisa Hurt
Author:
Melissa Wright
Author:
Joanne Demmler
Author:
Judith VanDerVoort
Author:
Susan Morris
Author:
Fiona Brook
Author:
David Tucker
Author:
Maria Chapman
Author:
Rhian Daniel
Author:
David Fone
Author:
Sinead Brophy
Author:
Shantini Paranjothy
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