Journal article

Fetal size in a rural melanesian population with minimal risk factors for growth restriction: An observational ultrasound study from Papua New Guinea

HW Unger, S Karl, RA Wangnapi, P Siba, G Mola, J Walker, I Mueller, M Ome, SJ Rogerson

American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | Published : 2015

Abstract

We conducted a prospective longitudinal study of fetal size in rural Papua New Guinea (PNG) involving 439 ultrasound-dated singleton pregnancies with no obvious risk factors for growth restriction. Sonographically estimated fetal weights (EFWs; N = 788) and birth weights (N = 376) were included in a second-order polynomial regression model (optimal fit) to generate fetal weight centiles. Means for specific fetal biometric measurements were also estimated. Fetal weight centiles from a healthy PNG cohort were consistently lower than those derived from Caucasian and Congolese populations, which overestimated the proportion of fetuses measuring small for gestational age (SGA; < 10th centile). Ta..

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Grants


Funding Acknowledgements

Aspects of this research were supported by the Malaria in Pregnancy Consortium through Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Grant 46099, Pfizer Inc. Investigator-Initiated Research Grant WS394663, an Internal Competitive Research Award (to M.O.), and the Pregvax Consortium through the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme Grant FP7-2007-HEALTH (PREGVAX 201588). SK is supported by an NHMRC Early Career Fellowship (#1052760). IM is supported by an NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship (#1043345).