Clinical Edge Journal Scan

Crown-chin length to crown-rump length ratio could help screen skeletal dysplasia in first trimester


 

Key clinical point: Increased fetal crown-chin length (CCL)/crown-rump length (CRL) ratio at 11-14 weeks’ gestation was significantly associated with an increased risk for skeletal dysplasia and could help screen the same in the first trimester.

Major finding: Of 16 fetuses with skeletal dysplasia, 62.5% had a CCL/CRL ratio above the 95th percentile, which when used as a cutoff yielded a detection rate, specificity, false-positive rate, and the positive likelihood ratio of 62.5%, 72.6%, 5.0%, and 17.5%, respectively.

Study details: Findings are from a retrospective study that compared CCL/CRL ratios on a first-trimester ultrasound examination in 418 normal fetuses with 154 fetuses affected by skeletal dysplasia.

Disclosures: No source of funding was declared . None of the other authors declared any conflict of interests.

Source: Li Y et al. J Ultrasound Med. 2022 Jan 3. doi: 10.1002/jum.15936 .

Recommended Reading

Growth-restricted fetuses have smaller cardiovascular biometrics already in mid-trimester of pregnancy
MDedge ObGyn
Fetal abdominal overgrowth already present at 20-24 gestational weeks in high-risk women with GDM
MDedge ObGyn