Effect of Prenatal Ultrasound Screening on Perinatal Outcome

Publication Description
Background Many clinicians advocate routine ultrasound screening during pregnancy to detect congenital anomalies, multiple-gestation pregnancies, fetal growth disorders, placental abnormalities, and errors in the estimation of gestational age. However, it is not known whether the detection of these conditions through screening leads to interventions that improve perinatal outcome. Methods We conducted a randomized trial involving 15,151 pregnant women at low risk for perinatal problems to determine whether ultrasound screening decreased the frequency of adverse perinatal outcomes. The women randomly assigned to the ultrasound-screening group underwent one sonographic examination at 15 to 22 weeks of gestation and another at 31 to 35 weeks. The women in the control group underwent ultrasonography only for medical indications, as identified by their physicians. Adverse perinatal outcome was defined as fetal death, neonatal death, or neonatal morbidity such as intraventricular hemorrhage. Results The mean numbers of sonograms obtained per woman in the ultrasound-screening and control groups were 2.2 and 0.6, respectively. The rate of adverse perinatal outcome was 5.0 percent among the infants of the women in the ultrasound-screening group and 4.9 percent among the infants of the women in the control group (relative risk, 1.0; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.9 to 1.2; P = 0.85). The rates of preterm delivery and the distribution of birth weights were nearly identical in the two groups. The ultrasonographic detection of congenital anomalies had no effect on perinatal outcome. There were no significant differences between the groups in perinatal outcome in the subgroups of women with post-date pregnancies, multiple-gestation pregnancies, or infants who were small for gestational age. Conclusions Screening ultrasonography did not improve perinatal outcome as compared with the selective use of ultrasonography on the basis of clinician judgment.

Primary Author
Ewigman,Bernard G.
Crane,James P.
Frigoletto,Fredric D.
LeFevre,Michael L.
Bain,Raymond P.
McNellis,Donald
The RADIUS Study Group

Volume
329

Issue
12

Start Page
821

Other Pages
827

Publisher
Mass Med Soc

URL
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/329/12/821

PMID
8355740



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
The New England Journal of Medicine

Publication Year
1993

Publication Date
Sep 16,

Place of Publication
Boston

ISSN/ISBN
0028-4793

Document Object Index
10.1056/NEJM199309163291201