Automated quantitative evaluation of fetal atrioventricular annular plane systolic excursion
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23919Date
2021-06-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Methods The population used to develop the reference ranges consisted of women with an uncomplicated singleton pregnancy at 18–42 weeks of gestation (n = 201). The prolonged-pregnancy group comprised women with an uncomplicated singleton pregnancy at ≥ 41 + 0 weeks of gestation (n = 107). The third study cohort comprised women with a singleton pregnancy and suspicion of IUGR, defined as an estimated fetal weight < 2.5th centile or an estimated fetal weight < 10th centile and umbilical artery pulsatility index > 97.5th centile (n = 35). Cineloops of the four-chamber view of the fetal heart were recorded using cTDI. Regions of interest were placed at the AV plane in the left and right ventricular walls and the interventricular septum, and myocardial velocity traces were integrated and analyzed using an automated algorithm developed in-house to obtain mitral (MAPSE), tricuspid (TAPSE) and septal (SAPSE) annular plane systolic excursion. Gestational-age specific reference ranges were constructed and normalized for cardiac size. The correlation between AVPD measurements obtained using cTDI and those obtained by anatomic M-mode were evaluated, and agreement between these two methods was assessed using Bland–Altman analysis. The mean Z-scores of fetal AVPD in the cohort of prolonged pregnancies were compared between cases with normal and those with adverse outcome using Mann–Whitney U-test. The mean Z-scores of fetal AVPD in IUGR fetuses were compared with those in the normal reference population using Mann–Whitney U-test. Inter- and intraobservervariability for acquisition of cTDI recordings and offline analysis was assessed by calculating coefficients of variation (CV) using the root mean square method.
Results Fetal MAPSE, SAPSE and TAPSE increased with gestational age but did not change significantly when normalized for cardiac size. The fitted mean was highest for TAPSE throughout the second half of gestation, followed by SAPSE and MAPSE. There was a significant correlation between MAPSE (r = 0.64; P < 0.001), SAPSE (r = 0.72; P < 0.001) and TAPSE (r = 0.84; P < 0.001) measurements obtained by M-mode and those obtained by cTDI. The geometric means of ratios between AVPD measured by cTDI and by M-mode were 1.38 (95% limits of agreement (LoA), 0.84–2.25) for MAPSE, 1.00 (95% LoA, 0.72–1.40) for SAPSE and 1.20 (95% LoA, 0.92–1.57) for TAPSE. In the prolonged-pregnancy group, the mean ± SD Z-scores for MAPSE (0.14 ± 0.97), SAPSE (0.09 ± 1.02) and TAPSE (0.15 ± 0.90) did not show any significant difference compared to the reference ranges. Twenty-one of the 107 (19.6%) prolonged pregnancies had adverse perinatal outcome. The AVPD Z-scores were not significantly different between pregnancies with normal and those with adverse outcome in the prolonged-pregnancy cohort. The mean ± SD Z-scores for SAPSE (−0.62 ± 1.07; P = 0.006) and TAPSE (−0.60 ± 0.89; P = 0.002) were significantly lower in the IUGR group compared to those in the normal reference population, but the differences were not significant when the values were corrected for cardiac size. The interobserver CVs for the automated measurement of MAPSE, SAPSE and TAPSE were 28.1%, 17.7% and 15.3%, respectively, and the respective intraobserver CVs were 33.5%, 15.0% and 17.9%.
Conclusions This study showed that fetal AVPD can be measured automatically by integrating cTDI velocities over several cardiac cycles. Automated analysis of AVPD could potentially help gather larger datasets to facilitate use of machine-learning models to study fetal cardiac function. The gestational-age associated increase in AVPD is most likely a result of increasing cardiac size, as the AVPD normalized for cardiac size did not change significantly between 18 and 42 weeks. A decrease was seen in TAPSE and SAPSE in IUGR fetuses, but not after correction for cardiac size.