# Selective Fetoscopic Laser Photocoagulation of Placental Anastomoses Leads to Early Reduction of Cardiovascular Burden in the Twin‐Twin Transfusion Syndrome

**Authors:** Kasey J. Chaszczewski, Sarah Perelman, Christine B. Falkensammer, Anita Szwast, Chengcheng Pang, Zhiyun Tian, Juliana Gebb, Julie Moldenhauer, Nahla Khalek, Jack Rychik

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/pd.6805 · Prenatal Diagnosis · 2025-04-26

## TL;DR

Laser treatment for twin-twin transfusion syndrome reduces cardiovascular strain in fetuses within a week.

## Contribution

This study shows early cardiovascular improvement after laser treatment in twin-twin transfusion syndrome.

## Key findings

- Recipient fetuses showed increased MCA PI and decreased UA PI after treatment.
- Donor fetuses had decreased MCA and UA PI, with no change in cerebroplacental ratio.
- Higher pre-treatment cardiovascular burden correlated with greater improvement after SFLP.

## Abstract

Cardiovascular disturbances are common in twin‐twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS). However, the rate of improvement in cardiovascular burden in response to selective fetoscopic laser photocoagulation (SFLP) is not well known.

Fetal echocardiograms were performed prior to and 1 week following SFLP. Cardiovascular burden was characterized using the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) TTTS Cardiovascular (CV) Score. Pulsatility indices (PI) of the umbilical artery (UA) and middle cerebral artery (MCA), cerebroplacental ratio (CPR) and elements of CHOP CV Score were analyzed pre and post SFLP.

SFLP was performed in 198 subjects; 17 were excluded due demise post SFLP. Following SFLP, recipient (R) demonstrated an increase in MCA PI and a decrease in UA PI, with an increase in CPR. Donor (D) demonstrated a similar magnitude decrease in MCA PI and UA PI, yielding no change in CPR. Following SFLP, the mean CHOP CV Score decreased. The magnitude of change was greater in the subgroup with greater pre‐SFLP cardiovascular burden (CHOP CV Score ≥ 6).

Improvement in CV burden is seen as early as 1‐week post‐SFLP, supporting acute alteration of loading conditions as a significant contributor. Further study of the trajectory of CV alterations may provide insight into the complex mechanisms underlying TTTS.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** twin-twin transfusion syndrome (MONDO:0019805)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Transfusion Syndrome (MESH:D065227), Cardiovascular Burden (MESH:D002318)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

27 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12137031/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12137031