Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This is a single site, single arm, non-randomized, pilot trial to assess the feasibility and safety of treating severe congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) with Fetal Endoscopic Tracheal Occlusion (FETO) at Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC)/ NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital (NYP).
Full description
Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) affects 1 in 2,200 to 5,000 live births per year. The defect in the fetal diaphragm allows abdominal organs (intestine, stomach, liver, spleen) to migrate into the thorax, hindering normal lung development. The herniated contents place pressure on the developing lungs and this may result in varying degrees of pulmonary hypoplasia and associated pulmonary hypertension; both of which may be lethal. In an attempt to prenatally quantify the impact of the herniated organs on underlying lung development, prognostic tools have been developed. The most widely used prognostic indicator is lung-to-head ratio (LHR) as measured by prenatal ultrasound. The lung contralateral to the diaphragmatic defect is measured in a transverse plane at the level of the four chamber heart and its area is divided by the fetal head circumference (LHR). The LHR is tracked through the pregnancy but seems to be most strongly correlated with outcomes in the early third trimester.
Fetuses with severe CDH have a high risk of mortality. The current standard of care treatment offers postnatal repair, which is associated with overall survival of 71% in all cases. A majority (68%) of fetuses are prenatally diagnosed, and the survival in this cohort is even lower at 65%. The severity of the defect can be measured prenatally by the degree of pulmonary hypoplasia, and the survival drops to below 30% for those with expected lung volumes below 30% of expected. The purpose of the FETO procedure in severe CDH patients is to improve prenatal lung growth in order to potentially increase neonatal survival.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Provision of signed and dated informed consent form
Stated willingness to comply with all study procedures and availability (meets psychosocial criteria below) for the duration of the study
Pregnant women, age 18 years and older
Singleton pregnancy
No pathogenic variants on microarray or pathologic findings on karyotype; results by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) will be acceptable if patient is >26 weeks
Fetal echocardiogram with changes expected with CDH and no major structural cardiac defects
Fetal CDH (left or right) with severe pulmonary hypoplasia, defined as o/e LHR <25% with liver up
Gestational age at FETO procedure: if o/e LHR <25%, will be done at 27 weeks plus 0 days to 29 weeks plus 6 days
Meets psychosocial criteria
Exclusion criteria
Multi-fetal pregnancy
History of latex allergy
History of preterm labor or incompetent cervix (requiring cerclage), short cervix (<20mm), or uterine anomaly predisposing to preterm labor
Psychosocial ineligibility
Bilateral CDH, unilateral CDH with o/e LHR > 25%, or unilateral CDH with o/e LHR <25% but liver completely down in abdomen
Additional fetal or genetic abnormalities that would impact care after delivery or be known to have an impact on outcome
Maternal contraindications to elective fetoscopic surgery
Significant placental abnormalities (abruption, chorioangioma, accreta) known at time of enrollment and/or surgery
Maternal-fetal Rh isoimmunization, Kell sensitization or neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia affecting the current pregnancy.Maternal HIV, Hepatitis B with positive surface antigen, Hepatitis C with presence of virus in maternal blood due to risk of fetal transmission during the procedure
No safe or feasible fetoscopic approach to balloon placement
Uterine anomaly such as large or multiple fibroids or mullerian duct abnormality
Participation in another intervention study that influences maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Amanda Alonso, MHA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal