Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York; Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York; Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2023 Jun;8(6):592-598. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2023.02.002. Epub 2023 Feb 10.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a powerful, noninvasive tool for both clinical practice and research. Though the safety of MRI has been endorsed by many professional societies and government bodies, some concerns have remained about potential risk from prenatal MRI. Case-control animal studies of MRI scanning during gestation and effects on offspring are the most direct test available for potential risks. We performed a meta-analysis of extant animal studies of prenatal MRI examining reproductive and offspring outcomes.
Relevant articles were identified through PubMed search and citation searching of known articles and review papers. Eighteen relevant studies were identified with case-control designs of prenatal scanning conducted in vivo with mammalian species using MRI-relevant field strength. Standardized mean difference effect sizes were analyzed across k = 81 outcomes assessed across 649 unexposed dams, 622 exposed dams, 3024 unexposed offspring, and 3328 exposed offspring using a multilevel meta-analytic approach that clustered effect sizes within publications.
The meta-analysis indicated no significant evidence for a deleterious effects of prenatal MRI (standardized mean difference = 0.17, 95% CI [-0.19, 0.54], t = 0.94, p = .35) across outcomes. Similarly, no effects were observed when separately examining the 4 most commonly assessed outcomes: birth weight, litter size, fetal viability, and physical malformations (p > .05).
Case-control mammalian animal studies indicate no significant known risks of prenatal MRI to reproductive outcomes or offspring development. This finding is largely mirrored in human research, though the lack of randomized case-control designs limits direct comparison. The current findings provide additional support to the prevailing consensus that prenatal MRI poses no known risk to offspring.
磁共振成像(MRI)是一种强大的、非侵入性的工具,在临床实践和研究中都有应用。尽管许多专业协会和政府机构都认可 MRI 的安全性,但人们仍然对产前 MRI 可能存在的风险表示担忧。在妊娠期间进行 MRI 扫描并对后代产生影响的病例对照动物研究是对潜在风险进行的最直接测试。我们对现有的产前 MRI 动物研究进行了荟萃分析,以检查生殖和后代的结果。
通过 PubMed 搜索和已知文章和综述论文的引文搜索,确定了相关文章。确定了 18 项相关研究,这些研究采用病例对照设计,在体内使用与 MRI 相关的场强对哺乳动物进行产前扫描。使用多水平荟萃分析方法,对 649 名未暴露的母鼠、622 名暴露的母鼠、3024 名未暴露的后代和 3328 名暴露的后代进行了 81 项评估结果的标准化均数差效应大小分析,该方法在出版物内聚类效应大小。
荟萃分析表明,产前 MRI 没有对生殖结果或后代发育产生有害影响的明显证据(标准化均数差=0.17,95%置信区间[-0.19,0.54],t=0.94,p=0.35)。同样,当分别检查最常评估的 4 项结果时,也未观察到影响:出生体重、窝仔数、胎儿活力和身体畸形(p>0.05)。
病例对照哺乳动物动物研究表明,产前 MRI 对生殖结果或后代发育没有明显的已知风险。这一发现与人类研究基本一致,尽管缺乏随机病例对照设计限制了直接比较。目前的研究结果为普遍认为产前 MRI 对后代没有已知风险的共识提供了更多支持。