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Quantitative diagnostic advantages of three‐dimensional ultrasound volume imaging for fetal posterior fossa anomalies: Preliminary establishment of a prediction model
Author(s) -
Sun Lijuan,
Guo Cuixia,
Yao Ling,
Zhang Tiejuan,
Wang Jingjing,
Wang Li,
Liu Yan,
Wang Keyang,
Wang Longxia,
Wu Qingqing
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
prenatal diagnosis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.956
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1097-0223
pISSN - 0197-3851
DOI - 10.1002/pd.5549
Subject(s) - medicine , hypoplasia , tentorium , cerebellar hypoplasia (non human) , 3d ultrasound , cerebellar vermis , cisterna , ventriculomegaly , ultrasound , fourth ventricle , prenatal diagnosis , brainstem , radiology , anatomy , fetus , cerebellum , pregnancy , biology , genetics , cell , golgi apparatus
Objectives To quantitatively assess prenatal diagnostic performance of three‐dimensional ultrasound (3D‐US) for posterior fossa anomalies (PFA) and establish a preliminarily 3D‐US prediction model. Methods Sixty singleton fetuses suspected of PFA by 2D‐US presented their detailed 3D‐US evaluation. The surface area of vermis (SAV), brainstem‐vermis, and brainstem‐tentorium angles were measured by 3D‐US. The good prognosis was defined as normal neurodevelopmental outcome. MRI and autopsy were the diagnostic reference standard. Results There was a significant difference between 2D‐US (60.0%, 36/60) and 3D‐US (94.8%, 55/58) for the diagnostic accuracy ( P < .01). Prenatal 3D‐US prediction model was established with observed/expected SAV as the main predictor (area under the curve [AUC]: 0.901; 95% CI, 0.810‐0.992, P < .001). When it was more than 107.5%, the prognosis seemed to be good (sensitivity: 96.4%, specificity: 26.7%), which led to consideration of mega cisterna magna, Blake pouch cyst, or small arachnoid cyst. The prognosis appeared to be poor when it was less than 73% (sensitivity: 71.4%, specificity: 100%), and the diagnosis tended to be a Dandy‐Walker malformation, vermian hypoplasia, and cerebellar hypoplasia. Brainstem–vermis and brainstem–tentorium angles were the secondary indicators (AUC: 0.689 vs 0.761; 95% CI, 0.541‐0.836 vs 0.624‐0.897, P = .014 vs.001). Conclusions It seems that the exact types of PFA can be effectively diagnosed by quantitative indicators of 3D‐US.