Clinical Edge Journal Scan

Short femur length diagnosed in prenatal screening might require intensified pregnancy monitoring


 

Key clinical point: A short femur (SF) as an isolated symptom in prenatal diagnosis may not require additional surveillance, but intensified pregnancy monitoring may be required if SF is a part of small for gestational age (SGA) baby, an intrauterine growth retardation, or a suspected late growth retardation.

Major finding: Overall, 49.9% of fetuses presented with an isolated SF and 50.1% had additional abnormalities, 42.6% being SGA babies and 57.4% having ≥1 severe malformation. Children with isolated SF vs those with SF and additional abnormalities had a higher live birth rate (97.8% vs 78.9%) and a lower rate of perinatal death (0.1% vs 3.9%), abortions (0.3% vs 9.6%), or spontaneous miscarriages/intrauterine demises (1.8% vs 7.6%).

Study details: Findings are from a retrospective analysis of 1,373 singleton pregnancies with a fetal femoral length of <5 th percentile, detected during the second trimester screening.

Disclosures: The open access funding was enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. The authors declared no conflict of interests.

Source: Friebe‐Hoffmann U et al. Arch Gynecol Obstet. 2022 Jan 11. doi: 10.1007/s00404-021-06394-z .

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
Crown-chin length to crown-rump length ratio could help screen skeletal dysplasia in first trimester
MDedge ObGyn
Rapid intrapartum test for maternal GBS colonization fails to reduce rate of antibiotics administered
MDedge ObGyn
Testing fetal structural anomalies using simultaneous CNV-seq and whole-exome sequencing
MDedge ObGyn
Combining ultrasound examination with NIPT improves positive predictive value for trisomy 18
MDedge ObGyn