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Comparison of fetal growth patterns from Western India with Intergrowth-21st

Comparison of fetal growth patterns from Western India with Intergrowth-21st
Comparison of fetal growth patterns from Western India with Intergrowth-21st

Objective: to generate longitudinal fetal growth data in an Indian population and compare it with Intergrowth-21st.

Material and methods: fetal biometry data was collected in a prospective longitudinal observational study (REVAMP: Research Exploring Various Aspects and Mechanisms in Preeclampsia) from 2017 to 2022. Fetal crown-rump length (CRL) was measured at 11-14 weeks gestation, and biparietal diameter (BPD), head circumference (HC), abdominal circumference (AC), and femur length (FL) at 18-22 and 32-35 weeks, and converted into Z-scores using the Intergrowth standard. Generalized Additive Models for Location, Scale and Shape (GAMLSS) models were used to construct fetal growth centile curves compared against Intergrowth centiles.

Results: out of 1096 singleton pregnancies in REVAMP, this analysis included 655 'healthy' pregnancies (uncomplicated by pre-eclampsia, diabetes, pre-term delivery or low birth weight) and a sub-set of 106 'low-risk' pregnancies defined using Intergrowth criteria. The 'healthy' study subjects showed lower mean CRL Z-score [-0.45 SD (95% CI:-0.54,-0.37)] at 11-14 weeks, and BPD Z-score [-1.2 SD (-1.28,-1.11) and -1.17 SD (-1.23,-1.1)] at 18-22 and 32-35 weeks respectively. Mean HC Z-score was comparable to the Intergrowth standard at 18-22 weeks [-0.08 SD (-0.16, 0.02)] but smaller at 32-35 weeks [-0.25 SD (-0.32,-0.19)]. Mean AC Z-score was lower at 18-22 weeks [-0.32 SD (-0.41,-0.23)] but comparable at 32-35 weeks [0.004 SD (-0.07, 0.07)]. FL was comparable to or larger than the Intergrowth standard at both time points [0.05 SD (-0.05, 0.14); 0.82 SD (0.75, 0.89), respectively]. These findings were similar, though measurements were slightly larger, in the 'low-risk' sample.

Conclusions: this data from healthy and low-risk pregnant women in urban western India indicates that some fetal dimensions and growth trajectories differ significantly from the Intergrowth-21st. Our data suggest the need for a larger representative study to define a population-specific fetal growth reference for India, for identification of fetal growth restriction.

Humans, Female, Pregnancy, India, Fetal Development/physiology, Adult, Prospective Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Gestational Age, Crown-Rump Length, Ultrasonography, Prenatal, Infant, Newborn, Fetal Growth Retardation, Young Adult
1932-6203
e0310710
Kinare, Arun
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Joshi, Priscilla
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Dangat, Kamini
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Gupte, Sanjay
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Tipnis, Manish
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Singh, Garima
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Randhir, Karuna
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Madiwale, Shweta
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Pisal, Hemlata
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Wagh, Girija
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Lalwani, Sanjay
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Joshi, Sadhana
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Fall, Caroline
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Sachdev, Harshpal Singh
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Kinare, Arun
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Joshi, Priscilla
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Dangat, Kamini
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Gupte, Sanjay
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Tipnis, Manish
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Singh, Garima
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Randhir, Karuna
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Madiwale, Shweta
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Pisal, Hemlata
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Wagh, Girija
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Lalwani, Sanjay
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Joshi, Sadhana
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Fall, Caroline
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Sachdev, Harshpal Singh
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Kinare, Arun, Joshi, Priscilla, Dangat, Kamini, Gupte, Sanjay, Tipnis, Manish, Singh, Garima, Randhir, Karuna, Madiwale, Shweta, Pisal, Hemlata, Wagh, Girija, Lalwani, Sanjay, Joshi, Sadhana, Fall, Caroline and Sachdev, Harshpal Singh (2024) Comparison of fetal growth patterns from Western India with Intergrowth-21st. PLoS ONE, 19 (10), e0310710. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0310710).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to generate longitudinal fetal growth data in an Indian population and compare it with Intergrowth-21st.

Material and methods: fetal biometry data was collected in a prospective longitudinal observational study (REVAMP: Research Exploring Various Aspects and Mechanisms in Preeclampsia) from 2017 to 2022. Fetal crown-rump length (CRL) was measured at 11-14 weeks gestation, and biparietal diameter (BPD), head circumference (HC), abdominal circumference (AC), and femur length (FL) at 18-22 and 32-35 weeks, and converted into Z-scores using the Intergrowth standard. Generalized Additive Models for Location, Scale and Shape (GAMLSS) models were used to construct fetal growth centile curves compared against Intergrowth centiles.

Results: out of 1096 singleton pregnancies in REVAMP, this analysis included 655 'healthy' pregnancies (uncomplicated by pre-eclampsia, diabetes, pre-term delivery or low birth weight) and a sub-set of 106 'low-risk' pregnancies defined using Intergrowth criteria. The 'healthy' study subjects showed lower mean CRL Z-score [-0.45 SD (95% CI:-0.54,-0.37)] at 11-14 weeks, and BPD Z-score [-1.2 SD (-1.28,-1.11) and -1.17 SD (-1.23,-1.1)] at 18-22 and 32-35 weeks respectively. Mean HC Z-score was comparable to the Intergrowth standard at 18-22 weeks [-0.08 SD (-0.16, 0.02)] but smaller at 32-35 weeks [-0.25 SD (-0.32,-0.19)]. Mean AC Z-score was lower at 18-22 weeks [-0.32 SD (-0.41,-0.23)] but comparable at 32-35 weeks [0.004 SD (-0.07, 0.07)]. FL was comparable to or larger than the Intergrowth standard at both time points [0.05 SD (-0.05, 0.14); 0.82 SD (0.75, 0.89), respectively]. These findings were similar, though measurements were slightly larger, in the 'low-risk' sample.

Conclusions: this data from healthy and low-risk pregnant women in urban western India indicates that some fetal dimensions and growth trajectories differ significantly from the Intergrowth-21st. Our data suggest the need for a larger representative study to define a population-specific fetal growth reference for India, for identification of fetal growth restriction.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 September 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 October 2024
Keywords: Humans, Female, Pregnancy, India, Fetal Development/physiology, Adult, Prospective Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Gestational Age, Crown-Rump Length, Ultrasonography, Prenatal, Infant, Newborn, Fetal Growth Retardation, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500384
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500384
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: c0fbf1cd-b99c-4672-9dab-39f161d6e904
ORCID for Caroline Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

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Date deposited: 28 Apr 2025 16:57
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 01:34

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Contributors

Author: Arun Kinare
Author: Priscilla Joshi
Author: Kamini Dangat
Author: Sanjay Gupte
Author: Manish Tipnis
Author: Garima Singh
Author: Karuna Randhir
Author: Shweta Madiwale
Author: Hemlata Pisal
Author: Girija Wagh
Author: Sanjay Lalwani
Author: Sadhana Joshi
Author: Caroline Fall ORCID iD
Author: Harshpal Singh Sachdev

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