1. A multidisciplinary fetal neurosurgical service-5 years of fetal outcomes from a national referral centre
- Author
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Clare O'Connor, Stephen Carroll, Shane Higgins, Heather Hughes, Jennifer M. Walsh, Peter McParland, John Caird, Barbara Cathcart, Gabrielle C. Colleran, Fionnuala M. McAuliffe, Darach Crimmins, and Rhona Mahony
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Referral ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Ultrasonography, Prenatal ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fetus ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Agenesis of the corpus callosum ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Referral and Consultation ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Spina bifida ,Infant, Newborn ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Female ,Neurosurgery ,business ,Ventriculomegaly - Abstract
A specialist fetal neurosurgical clinic was set up in order to improve patient care in a tertiary referral fetal medicine centre. The clinic provides a targeted clinical service for women diagnosed with fetal neurological abnormalities. The service consists of fetal MRI, fetal ultrasound and joint assessment and counselling from neurosurgery and fetal medicine teams. We aimed to review this service that provides MDT expertise directly to parents and record the cases and pregnancy outcomes involved. This is a prospective study of clinic data from Jan 2013 to Dec 2017. Information includes ultrasound scan findings, MRI results, karyotype results and pregnancy outcome data including post mortem results and data from the paediatric neurosurgery service at the affiliated children’s hospital. From 2013 to 2017, there were 1852 major fetal anomalies diagnosed antenatally at the tertiary referral fetal medicine service and n = 306/1852 [16%] were primarily neurological in origin. The neurosurgical clinic reviewed 125 patients since 2013. The most common reasons for referral were spina bifida, n = 60 [48%] and isolated ventriculomegaly n = 43 [34%]. Other reasons for referral include agenesis of the corpus callosum n = 4 [3%], encephalocoele n = 5 [4%] and intracranial mass lesions n = 3 [2.4%]. Cases with borderline ventriculomegaly and cases with known chromosomal or genetic abnormalities were not typically referred to the clinic. Full outcome data were available on 110 of 125 women seen. Thirty-two women [29%] underwent invasive testing and 14 women [12.7%] had a termination of pregnancy. Multidisciplinary antenatal counselling supported with in utero MRI provides families with optimum information to inform them of likely neonatal outcome.
- Published
- 2020