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Oesophageal atresia: sonographic signs may prenatally predict surgical complexity

Authors :
Weissbach, Tal
Kushnir, Anya
Haber Kaptsenel, Ella
Leibovitch, Leah
Bilik, Ron
Shinhar, Daniel
Karplus, Gideon
Achiron, Reuven
Kivilevitch, Zvi
Barzilay, Eran
Mazaki Tovi, Shali
Weisz, Boaz
Kassif, Eran
Source :
Archives of Disease in Childhood. Fetal and Neonatal Edition; 2022, Vol. 107 Issue: 2 p206-210, 5p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

ObjectiveOesophageal atresia (OA) is a major anomaly of varying severity. The complexity of surgical correction highly depends on the gap length of missing oesophagus and the presence of a distal fistula. The aim of this study was to identify antenatal sonographic findings associated with presence of a distal fistula and type of surgical repairMethodsPrenatal medical records of neonates postnatally diagnosed with OA were reviewed. Sonographic signs of OA (small/absent stomach, polyhydramnios, oesophageal pouch) and the trimester at sign detection were recorded and compared between (1) OA with and without a distal fistula and (2) early one-step versus delayed two-step anastomosis. Multivariate analysis was performed.ResultsOverall, 80 cases of OA were included. Absence of a distal fistula was significantly associated with higher rates of small/absent stomach (100% vs 28.6%, P<0.0001), oesophageal pouch (100% vs 24.3%, P<0.0001) and severe polyhydramnios (66.7% vs 22.9%, P=0.006), compared with OA with a distal fistula.Cases requiring a delayed two-step repair had higher rates of small/absent stomach (84.2% vs 16.7%, P>0.0001), severe polyhydramnios (47.4% vs 16.7%, P=0.008) and oesophageal pouch (73.7% vs 18.5%, P<0.0001), compared with those corrected in an early one-step anastomosis.Multivariate logistic regression found small/absent stomach and pouch to be significantly and independently associated with a delayed two-step anastomosis.ConclusionOA without a distal fistula is associated with higher rates of prenatal sonographic signs. Both small/absent stomach and a pouch are independently associated with a delayed two-step anastomosis. These findings may help improve antenatal parental counselling regarding the anticipated surgical repair.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13592998 and 14682052
Volume :
107
Issue :
2
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Archives of Disease in Childhood. Fetal and Neonatal Edition
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs58947240
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2021-321836