Effects of placental chorionicity on outcome in twin pregnancies. A cohort study.

1999 
OBJECTIVE: To examine the effects of the chorionicity of the placenta on infant outcome at 1 year of age in twin pregnancies. STUDY DESIGN: Cohort study and retrospective review of the medical records of 44 monochorionic (MC) and 164 dichorionic (DC) twin gestations that had been followed at our institution since < 20 weeks' gestation. Physical and neurologic status was assessed at 1 year of corrected age in infants born to these 208 women. RESULTS: Adverse infant outcomes, such as death, cerebral palsy and mental retardation, occurred in 9 (10%) of 88 MC infants (4 deaths and 5 disabled infants) as compared with 12 (3.7%) of 328 DC infants (6 deaths and 6 disabled infants) (P <.05). Although delivery occurred one week earlier in MC than in DC twins (34.7±2.8 vs. 35.7±2.3 weeks, P<.01), there was no significant difference in gestational age at birth or birth weight between the 9 MC and 12 DC infants with adverse outcomes. A presumptive antenatal diagnosis of twin-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) was made in 14 (32%) of the 44 MC twin gestations. TTTS was considered to be responsible for adverse outcome in 7 MC infants. All 9 MC infants with adverse outcomes and 4 (33%) of 12 DC infants with adverse outcomes belonged to pairs that had weight discordance ≥25% (P <.01). CONCLUSION: MC twins had an increased risk of adverse outcomes as compared with DC twins, mainly because of TTTS. In both MC and DC twins, a birth weight discordance ≥25% was associated with adverse infant outcomes. The number of infants with disabilities at 1 year of age was equal to the number of deaths.
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