Foetal Repair of Spina Bifida Improves Outcomes in Children

A follow-up study found further evidence that foetal surgery for spina bifida extends benefits even further into childhood.

Adding to a growing body of research affirming the benefits of fetal surgery for spina bifida, new findings show prenatal repair of the spinal column confers physical gains that extend into childhood.

Spina bifida is a birth defect where the vertebral column is open (bifid), often involving the spinal cord. Myelomeningocele (MMC; open spina bifida) is the clinically most significant, where the spinal neural tube fails to close during development of the embryo. The exposed neural tissue degenerates in utero, causing a neurological deficit that varies with the amount of lesion. This occurs in 1 in 1000 births worldwide.

“This study shows that the benefits of fetal surgery for spina bifida extend beyond early childhood and well into a child’s first decade of life,” said co-author of the study N Scott Adzick, MD, Surgeon-in-Chief at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), Director of CHOP’s Center for Fetal Diagnosis and Treatment. “This is especially important because of previously raised concerns that the advantages from fetal surgery may decrease over time. Contrary to those concerns, there appears to be a long-term benefit from neural protection in utero.”

The present study is a follow-on of the Management of Myelomeningocele Study (MOMS), which was co-led by investigators at CHOP, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and the University of California, San Francisco, along with the data coordinating centre at the George Washington University Biostatistics Center. MOMS compared the outcomes of prenatal and traditional postnatal repair of myelomeningocele at 12 and 30 months, showing that there are considerable benefits from prenatal repair. Babies with spina bifida who received foetal surgery were less likely to need a shunt for the buildup of spinal fluid in the brain. Two and a half years after surgery, they walked better and had better overall motor function.

In MOMS2, the children from MOMS were comprehensively examined at ages from five to ten. They were assessed on a range of indicators, including fine motor skills and ability to do tasks unaided. The researchers found continuing benefits, including the foetal repair group being six times more likely to go to the toilet unaided than the postnatal repair group, and were 70% more likely to walk unaided, and twice as likely to walk without braces. They also had greater likelihood of engaging in self-care skills such as brushing teeth and using a fork.

“These data are important for demonstrating that fetal surgery for spina bifida improves mobility well into school age, but the implications of these results are even more profound,” said first author Amy J Houtrow, MD, PhD, MPH, Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine Division Chief at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh. She said that when children are able to move around by themselves, it has significant positive impacts on their quality of life.

“When we began performing fetal surgery more than two decades ago, we did so with the hope that the procedure would improve lives for children and their families,” explained Dr Adzick. “As we continue to improve the technique, shortening surgery times and increasing the gestational age at birth, we are heartened by these results, which show the lasting benefits of fetal surgery.”

Source: Medical Xpress

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