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Differential effect of intrauterine growth restriction on childhood neurodevelopment: a systematic review

Differential effect of intrauterine growth restriction on childhood neurodevelopment: a systematic review
Differential effect of intrauterine growth restriction on childhood neurodevelopment: a systematic review
Background
Neurodevelopmental disorders are increasingly believed to originate from intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Current reviews exploring the neurodevelopmental effects of IUGR, however, are mostly based on birthweight, an inadequate proxy.

Objective
We aimed to examine the association between IUGR documented in utero, and neurodevelopmental outcomes during childhood.

Search strategy
Medline, CINAHL, PsycInfo and Scopus were searched for relevant studies published after 1970.

Selection criteria
The analysis included studies that identified IUGR in utero, with follow-up assessments between 1 month and 12 years of age.

Data collection and analysis
Data was extracted for cognitive, behavioural, language, motor, hearing, vision or sleep outcomes. Studies were summarised separately for children born at <35 and ≥35 weeks gestation.

Main results
Of 28 876 titles identified, 38 were suitable for inclusion. IUGR children born ≥35 weeks gestation scored on average 0.5 SD lower than non-IUGR children across all neurodevelopmental assessments. IUGR children born <35 weeks of gestation scored approximately 0.7 SD lower than non-IUGR children across all neurodevelopmental assessments. IUGR children with evidence of fetal circulatory redistribution (preferential perfusion of the brain) had more severe neurodevelopmental impairments than those born IUGR alone.

Conclusions
IUGR increases the risk of neurodevelopmental impairment during childhood differentially across domains. IUGR children born preterm or with evidence of fetal circulatory redistribution are more severely affected.
1470-0328
1062-1072
Murray, E.
7bf1a8d5-dff0-4748-8060-e96377a70216
Fernandes, M.
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Fazel, M.
da200c51-fc5b-4be9-8cf3-e3c4435103d0
Kennedy, S.H.
767eed07-36ec-46a0-b81c-d423f2cd2c68
Villar, J.
316f758c-97b0-42a3-9b04-b7ead75181ee
Stein, A.
f6a13a48-78d3-471e-97d1-92e39bc109d3
Murray, E.
7bf1a8d5-dff0-4748-8060-e96377a70216
Fernandes, M.
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Fazel, M.
da200c51-fc5b-4be9-8cf3-e3c4435103d0
Kennedy, S.H.
767eed07-36ec-46a0-b81c-d423f2cd2c68
Villar, J.
316f758c-97b0-42a3-9b04-b7ead75181ee
Stein, A.
f6a13a48-78d3-471e-97d1-92e39bc109d3

Murray, E., Fernandes, M., Fazel, M., Kennedy, S.H., Villar, J. and Stein, A. (2015) Differential effect of intrauterine growth restriction on childhood neurodevelopment: a systematic review. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 122 (8), 1062-1072. (doi:10.1111/1471-0528.13435).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Neurodevelopmental disorders are increasingly believed to originate from intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Current reviews exploring the neurodevelopmental effects of IUGR, however, are mostly based on birthweight, an inadequate proxy.

Objective
We aimed to examine the association between IUGR documented in utero, and neurodevelopmental outcomes during childhood.

Search strategy
Medline, CINAHL, PsycInfo and Scopus were searched for relevant studies published after 1970.

Selection criteria
The analysis included studies that identified IUGR in utero, with follow-up assessments between 1 month and 12 years of age.

Data collection and analysis
Data was extracted for cognitive, behavioural, language, motor, hearing, vision or sleep outcomes. Studies were summarised separately for children born at <35 and ≥35 weeks gestation.

Main results
Of 28 876 titles identified, 38 were suitable for inclusion. IUGR children born ≥35 weeks gestation scored on average 0.5 SD lower than non-IUGR children across all neurodevelopmental assessments. IUGR children born <35 weeks of gestation scored approximately 0.7 SD lower than non-IUGR children across all neurodevelopmental assessments. IUGR children with evidence of fetal circulatory redistribution (preferential perfusion of the brain) had more severe neurodevelopmental impairments than those born IUGR alone.

Conclusions
IUGR increases the risk of neurodevelopmental impairment during childhood differentially across domains. IUGR children born preterm or with evidence of fetal circulatory redistribution are more severely affected.

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More information

Published date: 19 May 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457552
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457552
ISSN: 1470-0328
PURE UUID: a9b3983b-dba6-40f3-a58b-fd702449db4a
ORCID for M. Fernandes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0051-3389

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Jun 2022 16:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10

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Contributors

Author: E. Murray
Author: M. Fernandes ORCID iD
Author: M. Fazel
Author: S.H. Kennedy
Author: J. Villar
Author: A. Stein

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