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Fetal size in the second trimester is associated with the duration of pregnancy, small fetuses having longer pregnancies

Fetal size in the second trimester is associated with the duration of pregnancy, small fetuses having longer pregnancies
Fetal size in the second trimester is associated with the duration of pregnancy, small fetuses having longer pregnancies
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Conventionally, the pregnancy duration is accepted to be 280-282 days. Fetuses determined by ultrasound biometry to be small in early pregnancy, have an increased risk of premature birth. We speculate that the higher rate of preterm delivery in such small fetuses represents a pathological outcome not applicable to physiological pregnancies. Here we test the hypothesis that in low-risk pregnancies fetal growth (expressed by fetal size in the second trimester) is itself a determinant for pregnancy duration with the slower growing fetuses having a longer pregnancy. METHODS: We analysed duration of gestation data for 541 women who had a spontaneous delivery having previously been recruited to a cross-sectional study of 650 low-risk pregnancies. All had a regular menses and a known date of their last menstrual period (LMP). Subjects were examined using ultrasound to determine fetal head circumference (HC), abdominal circumference (AC) and femur length (FL) at 10-24 weeks of gestation. Length of the pregnancy was calculated from LMP, and birth weights were noted. The effect of fetal size at 10-24 weeks of gestation on pregnancy duration was assessed also when adjusting for the difference between LMP and ultrasound based fetal age. RESULTS: Small fetuses (z-score -2.5) at second trimester ultrasound scan had lower birth weights (p<0.0001) and longer duration of pregnancy (p<0.0001) than large fetuses (z-score +2.5): 289.6 days (95%CI 288.0 to 291.1) vs. 276.1 (95%CI 273.6 to 278.4) for HC, 289.0 days (95%CI 287.4 to 290.6) vs. 276.9 days (95%CI 274.4 to 279.2) for AC and 288.3 vs. 277.9 days (95%CI 275.6 to 280.1) for FL. Controlling for the difference between LMP and ultrasound dating (using HC measurement), the effect of fetal size on pregnancy length was reduced to half but was still present for AC and FL (comparing z-score -2.5 with +2.5, 286.6 vs. 280.2 days, p=0.004, and 286.0 vs. 280.9, p=0.008, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Fetal size in the second trimester is a determinant of birth weight and pregnancy duration, small fetuses having lower birth weights and longer pregnancies (up to 13 days compared with large fetuses). Our results support a concept of individually assigned pregnancy duration according to growth rates rather than imposing a standard of 280-282 days on all pregnancies
pregnancy, hypothesis, methods, risk, size, birth-weight, birth weight, fetal-growth, abstract, cross-sectional studies, fetal, head, weight, premature birth, women, growth, birth, femur
Johnsen, S.L.
d8667e8d-2a8b-43f0-a646-e54580197047
Wilsgaard, T.
23ebf248-81fa-482f-bdf3-9a05613cb3af
Rasmussen, S.
8c8378a6-88fa-4cf6-923b-ac99d4b2fd99
Hanson, M.A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f
Godfrey, K.M.
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Kiserud, T.
a68fe723-c8cf-49f6-9ea6-65c81f16ff31
Johnsen, S.L.
d8667e8d-2a8b-43f0-a646-e54580197047
Wilsgaard, T.
23ebf248-81fa-482f-bdf3-9a05613cb3af
Rasmussen, S.
8c8378a6-88fa-4cf6-923b-ac99d4b2fd99
Hanson, M.A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f
Godfrey, K.M.
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Kiserud, T.
a68fe723-c8cf-49f6-9ea6-65c81f16ff31

Johnsen, S.L., Wilsgaard, T., Rasmussen, S., Hanson, M.A., Godfrey, K.M. and Kiserud, T. (2008) Fetal size in the second trimester is associated with the duration of pregnancy, small fetuses having longer pregnancies. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 8 (1). (doi:10.1186/1471-2393-8-25).

Record type: Article

Abstract

ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Conventionally, the pregnancy duration is accepted to be 280-282 days. Fetuses determined by ultrasound biometry to be small in early pregnancy, have an increased risk of premature birth. We speculate that the higher rate of preterm delivery in such small fetuses represents a pathological outcome not applicable to physiological pregnancies. Here we test the hypothesis that in low-risk pregnancies fetal growth (expressed by fetal size in the second trimester) is itself a determinant for pregnancy duration with the slower growing fetuses having a longer pregnancy. METHODS: We analysed duration of gestation data for 541 women who had a spontaneous delivery having previously been recruited to a cross-sectional study of 650 low-risk pregnancies. All had a regular menses and a known date of their last menstrual period (LMP). Subjects were examined using ultrasound to determine fetal head circumference (HC), abdominal circumference (AC) and femur length (FL) at 10-24 weeks of gestation. Length of the pregnancy was calculated from LMP, and birth weights were noted. The effect of fetal size at 10-24 weeks of gestation on pregnancy duration was assessed also when adjusting for the difference between LMP and ultrasound based fetal age. RESULTS: Small fetuses (z-score -2.5) at second trimester ultrasound scan had lower birth weights (p<0.0001) and longer duration of pregnancy (p<0.0001) than large fetuses (z-score +2.5): 289.6 days (95%CI 288.0 to 291.1) vs. 276.1 (95%CI 273.6 to 278.4) for HC, 289.0 days (95%CI 287.4 to 290.6) vs. 276.9 days (95%CI 274.4 to 279.2) for AC and 288.3 vs. 277.9 days (95%CI 275.6 to 280.1) for FL. Controlling for the difference between LMP and ultrasound dating (using HC measurement), the effect of fetal size on pregnancy length was reduced to half but was still present for AC and FL (comparing z-score -2.5 with +2.5, 286.6 vs. 280.2 days, p=0.004, and 286.0 vs. 280.9, p=0.008, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Fetal size in the second trimester is a determinant of birth weight and pregnancy duration, small fetuses having lower birth weights and longer pregnancies (up to 13 days compared with large fetuses). Our results support a concept of individually assigned pregnancy duration according to growth rates rather than imposing a standard of 280-282 days on all pregnancies

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Published date: 2008
Keywords: pregnancy, hypothesis, methods, risk, size, birth-weight, birth weight, fetal-growth, abstract, cross-sectional studies, fetal, head, weight, premature birth, women, growth, birth, femur

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61253
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61253
PURE UUID: 86016262-1341-4630-8c1b-bd4257569dfe
ORCID for M.A. Hanson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6907-613X
ORCID for K.M. Godfrey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4643-0618

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Date deposited: 08 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:17

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Contributors

Author: S.L. Johnsen
Author: T. Wilsgaard
Author: S. Rasmussen
Author: M.A. Hanson ORCID iD
Author: K.M. Godfrey ORCID iD
Author: T. Kiserud

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