A Prospective Multi-Institutional Study Comparing the Brain Development in the Third Trimester between Opioid-Exposed and Nonexposed Fetuses Using Advanced Fetal MR Imaging Techniques.

Yun, Hyuk Jin, Usha D Nagaraj, Ellen Grant, Stephanie L Merhar, Xiawei Ou, Weili Lin, Ashley Acheson, Karen Grewen, Beth M Kline-Fath, and Kiho Im. 2024. “A Prospective Multi-Institutional Study Comparing the Brain Development in the Third Trimester Between Opioid-Exposed and Nonexposed Fetuses Using Advanced Fetal MR Imaging Techniques.”. AJNR. American Journal of Neuroradiology 45 (2): 218-23.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: While the adverse neurodevelopmental effects of prenatal opioid exposure on infants and children in the United States are well described, the underlying causative mechanisms have yet to be fully understood. This study aims to compare quantitative volumetric and surface-based features of the fetal brain between opioid-exposed fetuses and unexposed controls by using advanced MR imaging processing techniques.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a multi-institutional IRB-approved study in which pregnant women with and without opioid use during the current pregnancy were prospectively recruited to undergo fetal MR imaging. A total of 14 opioid-exposed (31.4 ± 2.3 weeks of gestation) and 15 unexposed (31.4 ± 2.4 weeks) fetuses were included. Whole brain volume, cortical plate volume, surface area, sulcal depth, mean curvature, and gyrification index were computed as quantitative features by using our fetal brain MR imaging processing pipeline.

RESULTS: After correcting for gestational age, fetal sex, maternal education, polysubstance use, high blood pressure, and MR imaging acquisition site, all of the global morphologic features were significantly lower in the opioid-exposed fetuses compared with the unexposed fetuses, including brain volume, cortical volume, cortical surface area, sulcal depth, cortical mean curvature, and gyrification index. In regional analysis, the opioid-exposed fetuses showed significantly decreased surface area and sulcal depth in the bilateral Sylvian fissures, central sulci, parieto-occipital fissures, temporal cortices, and frontal cortices.

CONCLUSIONS: In this small cohort, prenatal opioid exposure was associated with altered fetal brain development in the third trimester. This adds to the growing body of literature demonstrating that prenatal opioid exposure affects the developing brain.

Last updated on 04/03/2024
PubMed