May 6, 2021

New Publication from Dr. John Sled

A photo of Dr. John Sled

MBP scientist Dr. John Sled has led a team of researchers, which includes MBP scientist Dr. Chris Macgowan, in the publication of a new eBioMedicine article entitled ‘Wave reflections in the umbilical artery measured by Doppler ultrasound as a novel predictor of placental pathology.’

Through this research, Dr. Sled and his team successfully developed an innovative ultrasound technique for early detection of placental diseases, which could help prevent future stillbirths or serious illness in newborns.
 

Article Abstract

Background

The umbilical artery (UA) Doppler pulsatility index is used clinically to detect elevated feto-placental vascular resistance. However, this metric is confounded by variation in fetal cardiac function and is only moderately predictive of placental pathology. Our group developed a novel ultrasound methodology that measures wave reflections in the UA, thereby isolating a component of the Doppler signal that is specific to the placenta. The present study examined whether wave reflections in the UA are predictive of placental vascular pathology.

Methods

Standard clinical Doppler ultrasound of the UAs was performed in 241 pregnant women. Of these, 40 women met narrowly defined preset criteria for the control group, 36 had maternal vascular malperfusion (MVM) and 16 had fetal vascular malperfusion (FVM). Using a computational procedure, the Doppler waveforms were decomposed into a pair of forward and backward propagating waves.

Findings

Compared to controls, wave reflections were significantly elevated in women with either MVM (p<0.0001) or FVM pathology (p = 0.02). In contrast, the umbilical and uterine artery pulsatility indices were only elevated in the MVM group (p<0.0001) and there were no differences between women with FVM and the controls.

Interpretation

The measurement of wave reflections in the UA, combined with standard clinical ultrasound parameters, has the potential to improve the diagnostic performance of UA Doppler to detect placental vascular pathology. Identifying women with FVM pathology is particularly challenging prenatally and future investigations will determine if women at risk of this specific placental disease could benefit from this novel diagnostic technique.

Read the article on the eBioMedicine website.

Learn more about this research: