4.4 Review

The making of fetal surgery

Journal

PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS
Volume 30, Issue 7, Pages 653-667

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pd.2571

Keywords

fetal surgery; fetoscopy; ultrasound; fetal therapy

Funding

  1. European Commission [LSHC-CT-2006-037409]
  2. The Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek Vlaanderen (FWO) [1.8.012.07.N.02]
  3. Instituut voor Wetenschap en Technologie [IWT/07/0715]

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Fetal diagnosis prompts the question for fetal therapy in highly selected cases. Some conditions are suitable for in men) surgical intervention. This paper reviews historically important steps in the development of fetal surgery. The first invasive fetal intervention in 1963 was an intra-uterine blood transfusion. It took another 20 years to understand the pathophysiology of other candidate fetal conditions and to develop safe anaesthetic and surgical techniques before the team at the University of California at San Francisco performed its first urinary diversion through hysterotomy. This procedure would he abandoned as renal and pulmonary function could be just as effectively salvaged by ultrasound-guided insertion of a bladder shunt. Fetoscopy is another method for direct access to the feto-placental unit. It was historically used for fetal visualisation to guide biopsies or for vascular access but was also abandoned following the introduction of high-resolution ultrasound. Miniaturisation revived fetoscopy in the 1990s. since when it has been successfully used to operate on the placenta and umbilical cord. Today, it is also used in fetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH). M whom lung growth is triggered by percutaneous tracheal occlusion. It can also he used to diagnose and treat urinary obstruction. Many fetal interventions remain investigational hut for a number of conditions randomised trials have established the role of in utero surgery. making fetal surgery a clinical reality in a number of fetal therapy programmes. The safety of fetal surgery is such that even non-lethal conditions. such as myelomeningocoele repair, are at this moment considered a potential indication. This. as well as fetal intervention for CDH. is currently being investigated in randomised trials. Copyright (C) 2010 John Wiley & Sons. Ltd.

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