Sonographic screening to detect fetal cardiac anomalies: A 5-year experience with 111 abnormal cases

Abstract
To determine whether there is a difference between the types of cardiac lesions detected as abnormal prenatally and those that are not detected. Consecutive fetuses at 14 weeks' gestation or more were scanned in our unit from February 1990 through July 1995 and later were delivered at our hospital. Outcome information was obtained from neonatal echocardiograms and autopsies. Our results were compared to sensitivities for individual cardiac lesions based on pooled data from studies published previously. There were 111 fetuses with cardiac anomalies, of which 73 (66%) were identified correctly as abnormal prenatally. Sensitivities for the most common cardiac lesions were as follows: 87% atrioventricular septal (endocardial cushion) defects, 65% tetralogy of Fallot, 63% transposition of the great arteries, 50% aortic coarctation, and 44% isolated ventricular septal defects. The lesions that went undetected most frequently were isolated septal defects (n = 17); most of these were ventricular and small or moderate in size. Based on our sensitivities and those calculated from previous studies, the fetal cardiac lesions with the highest detection rates involve hypoplastic ventricles and atrioventricular septal defects, followed by lesions of the great arteries and finally by isolated septal defects. The sensitivity of sonographic screening to detect fetal cardiac anomalies varies with the type of lesion. Isolated septal defects are the most difficult lesions to detect.