Clinical analysis of 21 cases with short fetal femur in the third trimester

2017 
Objective: To analyze the clinical features and to explore the etiology of short fetal femur during the third trimester. Methods: From January 2010 to June 2016, 21 singleton pregnancies with short fetal femur detected by ultrasonography during the third trimester were referred to the Chinese PLA General Hospital. Clinical data were collected, karyotype or single nucleotide polymorphism microarray was carried out to detect chromosomal abnormalities, and FGFR3 c.1138G>A mutation detection was carried out to detect achondroplasia (ACH) via invasive procedure, respectively. The deviation of femur length from the mean value of the gestational age in ultrasonography was expressed as the Z-score. The difference between ACH and isolated short femur (ISF, in the absence of associated structure abnormality or genetic abnormality) was then explored. Results: In the 21 fetuses, 11 had abnormal genetic test results(52%, 11/21), including 9 cases of ACH, 1 case of Ellis-van Creveld Syndrome and 1 case of Pallister-Killian syndrome. In the 10 ISF fetuses (48%, 10/21), 3 cases were fetal growth restriction, 1 was normal small for gestational age infant and 6 cases were unexplained. The median Z-scores for 9 cases of ACH and 10 cases of ISF in the third trimester were -5.04, -3.20, respectively. The short femur in ACH was more severe than in ISF (P=0.005) in the third trimester. Conclusions: The etiology of short fetal femur is complicated, including skeletal dysplasia, chromosomal abnormality, fetal growth restriction, as well as normal variants during fetal development. Genetic test should be considered during the antenatal consultation.
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