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Prenatal Intervention in High-Risk CPAM: Postnatal Outcomes After Fetal versus Standard Surgery: A Propensity Score Matched Study

articles · StayCurrentMD · Sep 05, 2025
Congenital pulmonary airway malformation (CPAM) is a rare fetal lung anomaly characterized by cystic lesions that can impede lung development. While smaller lesions may remain asymptomatic and are managed postnatally, larger lesions can cause severe complications such as mediastinal shift and hydrops fetalis. Fetal surgery may be indicated in these cases. This study analyzed whether fetal surgical intervention affects outcomes of subsequent postnatal surgery in CPAM patients.A retrospective single-center cohort study was conducted on pediatric patients treated for CPAM between January 2010 and August 2024. Patients were divided into two groups: those with prenatal surgical intervention and those treated with postnatal surgery only. Propensity score matching based on gestational age, gender, birth weight, and lesion volume ratio yielded 23 matched patients: 14 in the fetal surgery group and 9 in the control group. Baseline characteristics, type of fetal intervention, intraoperative, and long-term postoperative outcomes were assessed. Multivariable regression was performed to account for confounding variables.Among 179 identified patients, 23 were included after propensity score matching: 14 in the fetal surgery group and 9 in the standard postnatal surgery group. Baseline characteristics were balanced, except for significantly higher disease severity in the fetal surgery group (hydrops 69% vs. 0%, p 
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