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A cohort study of fetal growth in twin pregnancies by chorionicity: comparison with European and American standards

To develop fetal growth standards for twin gestations by placental chorionicity in a Spanish population and compare them with European and American standards to estimate the suitability of their use in clinical practice. This was a retrospective cohort study of 518 twin pregnancies, 435 dichorionic-...

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Published in:European journal of obstetrics & gynecology and reproductive biology 2020-10, Vol.253, p.238-248
Main Authors: Savirón-Cornudella, Ricardo, Esteban, Luis M., Aznar-Gimeno, Rocío, Pérez-López, Faustino R., Ezquerro, Marta Chóliz, Pérez, Peña Dieste, Maza, José M. Campillos, Sanz, Gerardo, Larraz, Berta Castán, Tajada-Duaso, Mauricio
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Language:English
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Summary:To develop fetal growth standards for twin gestations by placental chorionicity in a Spanish population and compare them with European and American standards to estimate the suitability of their use in clinical practice. This was a retrospective cohort study of 518 twin pregnancies, 435 dichorionic-diamniotic and 83 monochorionic-diamniotic, performed between January 2012 and December 2017. A total of 4,783 and 1,455 estimated fetal weights were considered from the 17th to the 37th week of gestation, using multilevel models, to build dichorionic-diamniotic and monochorionic-diamniotic standards, respectively. The percentages of small and large for gestational age were calculated as a model adjustment measure and adjustment to the studied data and the values provided by our model were compared against those of six European and American twin standards and three singleton standards. Correlation analyses between percentile predictions were performed using Cohen kappa coefficient. The predictive ability to detect small for gestational age was also provided by the sensitivity and positive predictive value. We found slight differences between standards by chorionicity, being dichorionic-diamniotic percentiles slightly higher than monochorionic-diamniotic ones from the 17th to 37th weeks’ gestation. For dichorionic-diamniotic cases, both our standard (9.8-8.2) and that of Grantz (8.2-10.5) showed good adjustments for the 10th and 90th percentiles while the other compared standards underestimated or overestimated them. For monochorionic-diamniotic cases, both our standard (10.2-8.5) and that of Shivkumar (11.4-6.8) had the most suitable adjustment. The correlation analysis between small and large for gestational age cases provided by standards, showed clear differences among them. Kappa’s coefficient showed a substantial agreement between both Ananth (0.7) and Stirrup (0.69) dichorionic-diamniotic cases and our standard. There was also a substantial agreement between the Shivkumar (0.77) standard and our results for monochorionic-diamniotic cases. The correlation was moderate for all other comparisons. Our model showed a good adjustment to the studied population. There are clear differences among small and large for gestational age cases provided by twin standards in our studied population. The twin growth standards depend on the population characteristics and model structure. We found the use of singleton standards for twin pregnancies inadequate.
ISSN:0301-2115
1872-7654
DOI:10.1016/j.ejogrb.2020.08.044