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Laura Glaganski, MD & Jagroop (Rupi) Parikh - 2024 Fetal Care Center Navigating Perinatal Care for Trisomy 13 & 18

Video Published 2024-12-09 Updated 2024-12-09

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Topic Overview

Surgeons and anesthesiologists review practical considerations for managing surgical patients with trisomy 13/18, including common procedures, mortality risk factors, and airway challenges. Data from Ontario and Indiana cohorts show 18-53% of patients require surgery, with feeding access and airway interventions most common in early infancy.

Key Takeaways

  • 23% of trisomy 13 and 18% of trisomy 18 patients require surgery; many need 4+ lifetime procedures, most within first months of life.
  • Higher birth weight, later gestational age, and chromosomal mosaicism are associated with lower surgical mortality in trisomy 13/18.
  • General surgical anomalies (e.g., esophageal atresia) increase mortality risk; ENT, GU, and neurologic procedures do not.
  • Feeding access (G-tube/J-tube) is the most common surgical intervention; airway anomalies significantly impact anesthetic management.
  • Median survival after first surgery exceeds one year in most organ system categories except eye and cardiac surgeries in trisomy 18.

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