Late termination of pregnancy at a major Queensland tertiary hospital, 2010–2020
Shannyn Rosser, Renuka Sekar, Johanna Laporte, Gregory Duncombe, Alexa Bendall, Christoph Lehner, C. Portmann, Pauline McGrath, Karin Lust, Peter Ganter, Sailesh Kumar
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review rates of and indications for late pregnancy feticide at a major Queensland tertiary perinatal centre over the past decade. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING, PARTICIPANTS: The Centre for Advanced Prenatal Care at the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, a tertiary perinatal centre; feticides of singleton pregnancies of at least 22 weeks' gestation, 1 January 2010 - 31 December 2020. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Indications for feticide; median gestational age at feticide; referral source; time between referral, maternal-fetal medicine review, and feticide. RESULTS: weeks). The most frequent fetal indications for feticide were neurological abnormalities (110 of 305, 36%), aneuploidy or genetic syndromes (67, 22%), and cardiac malformations (59, 19%). Most women were seen for review within seven days of referral for feticide (154 of 197 for whom this information was available, 78%; median, five days; range, 0-34 days), and 136 of 197 feticides (69%) were undertaken within seven days of the initial maternal-fetal medicine review. CONCLUSIONS: Most late pregnancy feticides were performed because of fetal indications, primarily structural malformations or genetic abnormalities. Despite advances in prenatal imaging and diagnosis, late termination of pregnancy remains a necessary option in some pregnancies with maternal or fetal indications, and equitable access to late termination of pregnancy services is a vital component of reproductive health care.