Impact of birth weight to placental weight ratio and other perinatal risk factors on left ventricular dimensions in newborns: a prospective cohort analysis
Author:
Gad Ashraf1ORCID, Malouche Dhafer2, Chhabra Manoj3, Hoang Danthanh3, Suk Debbie3, Ron Nitin3, Dygulska Beata3, Gudavalli Madhu B.3, Nadroo Ali M.3, Narula Pramod3, Elmakaty Ibrahim4ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Division of Neonatal-Prenatal Medicine , 36977 Women’s Wellness and Research Centre, NICU, Hamad Medical Corporation , Doha , Qatar 2. Statistics Program, Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Physics , 61780 College of Arts and Sciences, Qatar University , Doha , Qatar 3. Division of Neonatal-Prenatal Medicine, Department of Pediatrics , New York Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital , New York , USA 4. College of Medicine , 61780 QU Health, Qatar University , Doha , Qatar
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
To investigate the association between birth weight to placental weight (BW/PW) ratio, and echocardiographic left ventricle (LV) morphology at birth, while accounting for other relevant perinatal factors.
Methods
A prospective cohort study was conducted on neonates at NewYork-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital from 2014 to 2018, categorized by their BW/PW percentile. Missing data were imputed with principal component analysis. Chi-squared and one-way analysis of variance were used to compare BW/PW groups and the best regression model was selected using a genetic and backward stepwise algorithm.
Results
We analyzed 827 neonates in three BW/PW groups: small (n=16), normal (n=488), and large (n=323). Placental thickness and smallest diameter were positively correlated with several LV parameters, including inter-ventricular septal thickness during diastole (IVSd) (p=0.002, p<0.001) and systole (IVSs) (p=0.001, p<0.001), LV posterior wall thickness at end of diastole (LVPWd) (p=0.003, p<0.001) and systole (LVPWs) (p<0.001, p<0.001), LV mass (p=0.017, p<0.001), and LV mass/volume (p=0.011, p<0.001). The BW/PW ratio correlated with an increased shortening fraction (estimate=0.29, 95 % CI 0.03–0.55, p=0.027). PW correlated with IVSs (p=0.019), while the longest placental diameter was linked to a decrease in LV internal dimension during diastole (LVIDd) (estimate=−0.07, p=0.039), LV mass (estimate=−0.11, p=0.024), and LV mass/volume (estimate=−0.55, p=0.005).
Conclusions
This study found that several placental factors, including the BW/PW ratio, can independently affect LV dimension and morphology, highlighting the importance of fetal growth and placental health in the physiological adaptation of the fetal heart. More research is needed to establish causation and inform newborn prevention strategies.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
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