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Dive into the research topics where C. Garabedian is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Garabedian.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 2014

Is intrauterine exchange transfusion a safe procedure for management of fetal anaemia

C. Garabedian; M. Philippe; P. Vaast; B. Wibaut; Julia Salleron; A. Delsalle; T. Rakza; Damien Subtil; V. Houfflin-Debarge

OBJECTIVE To study modalities and complications of intrauterine exchange transfusion (IUET) for the management of severe fetal anaemia. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective study of all IUET procedures performed between January 1999 and January 2012 at a regional centre. Characteristics of each procedure were studied to identify risk factors for complications. Survival rates according to the different aetiologies of anaemia were evaluated. RESULTS In total, 225 IUET procedures were performed in 96 fetuses. Major indications were feto-maternal erythrocyte alloimmunization (n=80/96, 83.3%) and parvovirus B19 infection (n=13/96, 13.5%). Twenty-six percent of the fetuses (25/96) had hydrops fetalis before the first IUET. Intrauterine fetal death occurred after 2.7% (6/225) of procedures, premature rupture of the membranes occurred after 0.9% (2/225) of procedures, and emergency caesarean section was required after 3.6% (8/225) of procedures. Fetal bradycardia [odds ratio (OR) 37, 95% confidence interval (CI) 8.3-170; p<0.01] and gestational age up to 32 weeks (OR 3.67; 95% CI, 1.07-12.58; p=0.038] were significantly associated with complications after IUET. Complications occurred in 17.7% of pregnancies (17/96) and 7.5% of IUET procedures (17/225). The overall survival rate in the study cohort was 87.5% (84/96): 90% (72/80) in the alloimmunization group and 76.9% (10/13) in the parvovirus-infected group (NS). CONCLUSION IUET has a higher complication rate than simple intrauterine transfusion, and should be performed by well-trained specialists.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2015

Does prenatal diagnosis modify neonatal treatment and early outcome of children with esophageal atresia

C. Garabedian; Rony Sfeir; Carole Langlois; Arnaud Bonnard; Naziha Khen-Dunlop; Thomas Gelas; Laurent Michaud; Frédéric Auber; Frédéric Gottrand; V. Houfflin-Debarge; Christian Piolat; Jean Louis Lemelle; Virginie Fouquet; Edouard Habonima; Francis Becmeur; Marie Laurence Polimerol; Anne Breton; Thierry Petit; Guillaume Podevin; Frederic Lavrand; Hossein Allal; Manuel Lopez; F. Elbaz; Thierry Merrot; Jean Luc Michel; Philippe Buisson; Emmanuel Sapin; P. Delagausie; C. Pelatan; J. Gaudin

OBJECTIVE Our study aimed at (1) evaluating neonatal treatment and outcome of neonates with either a prenatal or a postnatal diagnosis of esophageal atresia (EA) and (2) analyzing the impact of prenatal diagnosis on outcome based on the type of EA. STUDY DESIGN We conducted a population-based study using data from the French National Register for infants with EA born from 2008-2010. We compared prenatal, maternal, and neonatal characteristics among children with prenatal vs postnatal diagnosis and EA types I and III. We defined a composite variable of morbidity (anastomotic esophageal leaks, recurrent fistula, stenosis) and death at 1 year. RESULTS Four hundred sixty-nine live births with EA were recorded with a prenatal diagnosis rate of 24.3%; 82.2% of EA type I were diagnosed prenatally compared with 17.9% of EA type III (P < .001). Transfer after birth was lower in case of prenatal diagnosis (25.6% vs 82.5%; P < .001). The delay between birth and first intervention did not differ significantly among groups. The defect size was longer among the prenatal diagnosis group (2.61 vs 1.48 cm; P < .001). The composite variables were higher in prenatal diagnosis subset (44% vs 27.6%; P = .003) and in EA type I than in type III (58.1% vs 28.3%; P < .001). CONCLUSION Despite the excellent survival rate of EA, cases with antenatal detection have a higher morbidity rate related to the EA type (type I and/or long gap). Even though it does not modify neonatal treatment and the 1-year outcome, prenatal diagnosis allows antenatal parental counselling and avoids postnatal transfers.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2014

Does a combination of ultrasound, MRI, and biochemical amniotic fluid analysis improve prenatal diagnosis of esophageal atresia?

C. Garabedian; P. Verpillat; I. Czerkiewicz; C. Langlois; F. Muller; F. Avni; J. Bigot; R. Sfeir; P. Vaast; C. Coulon; Damien Subtil; V. Houfflin-Debarge

Prenatal diagnosis of esophageal atresia (EA) remains a challenge. Our objective was to evaluate the combination of sonography, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and amniotic fluid biochemical markers in prenatal diagnosis of EA.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 2016

In utero treatment of severe fetal anemia resulting from fetomaternal red blood cell incompatibility: a comparison of simple transfusion and exchange transfusion

Lucie Guilbaud; C. Garabedian; Anne Cortey; T. Rakza; B. Carbonne; V. Houfflin-Debarge

OBJECTIVE To compare in utero exchange transfusions (IUET) and in utero simple transfusions (IUST) for the treatment of fetal anemia resulting from red blood cell fetomaternal incompatibility. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective comparative study from January 2006 through December 2011. The two techniques were compared for effectiveness, complications, and neonatal outcomes. RESULTS 36 patients had 87 IUETs and 85 patients 241 IUSTs. Gestational age at the first transfusion was similar in both groups (IUET: 27±3.8 weeks; IUST: 27±4.7 weeks; NS) as was the initial fetal hemoglobin level (IUET: 6.4±2.8g/dL; IUST: 6.0±2.5g/dL; NS). No significant differences were noted for postprocedure complications or efficacy. The daily drop in hemoglobin level was similar in both groups (IUET: 0.41±0.23g/dL/day; IUST: 0.44±0.17g/dL/day; NS) as were the time intervals between two procedures. Gestational age at birth was earlier in the IUET group (34.4±1.3 weeks vs 35.5±1.8 weeks; p<0.001), but the postnatal transfusions or exchange transfusions rates and the duration of intensive phototherapy did not differ. No significant differences were noted for the overall survival rates (IUET: 100%; IUST: 96.4%; p>0.99). CONCLUSION IUET does not appear to provide any benefits compared with IUST, neither to be associated with a higher complication rate. The choice of the technique depends on availability of packed blood cells with high hematocrit (70-80%).


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 2015

Management of severe fetal anemia by Doppler measurement of middle cerebral artery: are there other benefits than reducing invasive procedures?

C. Garabedian; P. Vaast; Hélène Behal; C. Coulon; A. Duahamel; D. Thomas; T. Rakza; Damien Subtil; V. Houfflin-Debarge

OBJECTIVE Doppler measurement of peak velocity of systolic blood flow in the middle cerebral artery (PVS-MCA) can safely replace invasive testing in the diagnosis of fetal anemia in Rh-alloimmunized pregnancies and PSV-MCA is now the reference technique. However, no study has evaluated its impact in antenatal care and in survival rate. Our objective was to evaluate the impact of the measurement of PVS-MCA in antenatal management and neonatal outcome in maternal red cell alloimmunization requiring in utero transfusion (IUT). STUDY DESIGN Retrospective study between January 1999 and January 2013. We excluded all cases of hydrops without follow-up before first IUT. From 1999 to 2006, an IUT was indicated on the optical index at 450 nm (Period 1) and was then replaced by the use of PVS-MCA (Period 2). RESULTS 77 patients were included, 39 in Period 1 (104 IUT) and 38 in Period 2 (89 IUT). 5 cases of hydrops fetalis (12.8%) were diagnosed during the follow up in Period 1 and none during Period 2. The average number of IUT, the delays between 2 IUT and between last IUET and birth were comparable. The total rate of complication per IUT during the first period was 9.6% vs 1.1% during the second one (p=0.01). The overall survival rate in our population was 34/39 (86.8%) during Period 1 vs 38/38 (100%) during Period 2. CONCLUSION PSV-ACM allowed an improved monitoring with fewer occurrences of hydrops. Conversely, it did not modify antenatal management and timing of delivery.


PLOS ONE | 2017

A new analysis of heart rate variability in the assessment of fetal parasympathetic activity: An experimental study in a fetal sheep model

C. Garabedian; C. Champion; E. Servan-Schreiber; Laura Butruille; E. Aubry; D. Sharma; R. Logier; Philippe Deruelle; Laurent Storme; V. Houfflin-Debarge; J. De Jonckheere; Elena G. Tolkacheva

Analysis of heart rate variability (HRV) is a recognized tool in the assessment of autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity. Indeed, both time and spectral analysis techniques enable us to obtain indexes that are related to the way the ANS regulates the heart rate. However, these techniques are limited in terms of the lack of thresholds of the numerical indexes, which is primarily due to high inter-subject variability. We proposed a new fetal HRV analysis method related to the parasympathetic activity of the ANS. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of our method compared to commonly used HRV analysis, with regard to i) the ability to detect changes in ANS activity and ii) inter-subject variability. This study was performed in seven sheep fetuses. In order to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of our index in evaluating parasympathetic activity, we directly administered 2.5 mg intravenous atropine, to inhibit parasympathetic tone, and 5 mg propranolol to block sympathetic activity. Our index, as well as time analysis (root mean square of the successive differences; RMSSD) and spectral analysis (high frequency (HF) and low frequency (LF) spectral components obtained via fast Fourier transform), were measured before and after injection. Inter-subject variability was estimated by the coefficient of variance (%CV). In order to evaluate the ability of HRV parameters to detect fetal parasympathetic decrease, we also estimated the effect size for each HRV parameter before and after injections. As expected, our index, the HF spectral component, and the RMSSD were reduced after the atropine injection. Moreover, our index presented a higher effect size. The %CV was far lower for our index than for RMSSD, HF, and LF. Although LF decreased after propranolol administration, fetal stress index, RMSSD, and HF were not significantly different, confirming the fact that those indexes are specific to the parasympathetic nervous system. In conclusion, our method appeared to be effective in detecting parasympathetic inhibition. Moreover, inter-subject variability was much lower, and effect size higher, with our method compared to other HRV analysis methods.


Diabetes & Metabolism | 2015

Outcome of twin pregnancies associated with glucose intolerance

C. Poulain; Alain Duhamel; C. Garabedian; M. Cazaubiel; Marie-Claude Rejou; A. Vambergue; Philippe Deruelle

OBJECTIVES There is little information about the impact of hyperglycaemia in twin pregnancies. The objective of our study was to evaluate the maternal, foetal and neonatal complications in patients with twin pregnancy and glucose intolerance defined by gestational diabetes mellitus and gestational mild hyperglycaemia. STUDY DESIGN We performed a single-centre retrospective study. Screening for gestational diabetes was achieved by a two-step method. Patients were managed according to the French guidelines. After matching for age and body mass index, outcomes were compared in 177 patients with glucose intolerance and 509 controls. Macrosomia was defined as birth weight above the 90th percentile of gestational age adjusted for parity, foetal sex and maternal biometrics. RESULTS Prevalence of glucose intolerance was 17.5% in our population. Complications of pregnancy and mode of delivery were similar between the two groups. Caesarean section was associated with age >35 years, vascular complications of pregnancy and non-cephalic presentation of the first twin. Rate of macrosomia was not different between the two groups. The only risk factor for macrosomia was a history of macrosomia in a previous pregnancy (odds ratio = 5.9, 95% confidence interval = 1.8-19.2). CONCLUSION Twin pregnancies complicated by glucose intolerance were not associated with an increased risk of macrosomia or Caesarean section. Further studies should assess the value of screening gestational diabetes mellitus in twin pregnancies.


Diabetes & Metabolism | 2013

Prediction of macrosomia by serial sonographic measurements of fetal soft-tissues and the liver in women with pregestational diabetes

C. Garabedian; A. Vambergue; J. Salleron; P. Deruelle

OBJECTIVES This study aimed to determine whether antenatal ultrasound measurements of fetal soft-tissues and liver can predict macrosomia in women with pregestational diabetes. METHODS Fetal biometry, soft-tissue thickness (anterior abdominal wall [STAW], thigh [STT], upper arm [STA], scapular [STS]) and liver size were measured sonographically at 23, 28, 31 and 34 weeks of gestation. Large for gestational age (LGA) was defined as a birth weight greater than 90th percentile for gestational age on standard curves adjusted for maternal height and weight, parity and fetal gender. The area (±standard error) under receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curves were also calculated. RESULTS A total of 29 pregnant women with pregestational diabetes were included, and a total of 663 measurements taken. Fifteen neonates were LGA. There was no significant difference in fetal soft-tissue thickness at 23, 28 and 31 weeks between the LGA and non-LGA neonates. In contrast, at 34 weeks, fetal soft-tissues were significantly thicker in LGA neonates (P<0.05), but with no difference in liver surface area between the two groups. The specificity and sensitivity of 34-week ultrasonography to detect macrosomia was 78.6% and 66.7%, respectively, for abdominal circumference (AC), 71.4% and 93.3% for STT, 85.7% and 80.0% for STA, and 71.4% and 86.7% for STAW. No parameter was more powerful than the others. The best AUROC curves were found for AC (0.807), STT (0.821), STA (0.855) and STAW (0.821). CONCLUSION Third-trimester sonographic measurements of fetal soft-tissue may help to detect macrosomia in pregnancies complicated by pregestational diabetes.


Journal of gynecology obstetrics and human reproduction | 2017

Does a body mass index greater than 25 kg/m2 increase maternal and neonatal morbidity? A French historical cohort study

Philippe Deruelle; E. Servan-Schreiber; O. Rivière; C. Garabedian; F. Vendittelli

OBJECTIVES To evaluate, in a French multicenter cohort, the risk of C-section based on a high pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI). Secondary objectives were to assess the risk of elective C-section, severe post-partum hemorrhage (>1L), severe perineal tears (3rd and 4th degree) and neonatal complications according to pre-pregnancy BMI. STUDY DESIGN This historical cohort study analyzed records from the French AUDIPOG perinatal database. Inclusion criteria were deliveries≥22 weeks (or with a birth weight≥500g). Women with BMI<18.5kg/m2 (n=31,766) were excluded. After these exclusions, the study sample included 314,851 women between 1999 and 2009. Patients were classified among four BMI subgroups (normal: 18.5-24.9kg/m2, overweight: 25-29.9kg/m2, class I and II obesity: 30-39.9kg/m2 and class III obesity:≥40kg/m2). BMI was calculated using pre-pregnancy self-reported weight. Results were expressed as crude and adjusted relative risks (aRR). RESULTS A C-section occurred in 16.4%, 22.7%, 28.8% and 39.4% of normal BMI, overweight, obese and class III obese women, respectively (P<10-4). aRR of C-section increased with BMI: 1.26 [95%CI: 1.22-1.30] for BMI between 25-29.9kg/m2; 1.39 [95%CI: 1.34-1.45] for BMI between 30-39.9kg/m2 and 1.72 [95%CI: 1.57-1.90] for BMI≥40kg/m2; but not the elective C-section. Neonatal complications were more frequent with increasing maternal BMI (BMI 25-29.9: aRR=1.09 [95%CI: 1.06-1.12]; BMI 30-39.9: aRR=1.20 [95%CI: 1.16-1.25]; BMI≥40: aRR=1.33 [95%CI: 1.21-1.45]). CONCLUSION Our study confirmed that pre-pregnancy BMI is an important factor to consider because its elevation is associated with adverse obstetrical outcomes, especially cesarean delivery and neonatal complications.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 2016

Simplified Bishop score including parity predicts successful induction of labor

Joanna Ivars; C. Garabedian; Patrick Devos; Denis Therby; Sabine Carlier; Philippe Deruelle; Damien Subtil

OBJECTIVE Our objectives were to confirm the predictiveness of parity for successful labor induction and propose an improvement in the Bishops score to take parity into account and simultaneously simplify the original Bishop score. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective study of 326 deliveries induced by oxytocin and amniotomy before prostaglandins between January 1, 1987, and June 30, 1988. We conducted a univariate and then a multivariate analysis of the relation between successful labor induction - defined by vaginal delivery- and the components of Bishops score and parity. RESULTS Nulliparous accounted for 38% of the studied population. The mean Bishop at induction was 5.75±1.4. Fetal station, cervical effacement, and parity were the only factors associated with the success of induction in this study. Removing the cervical position and consistency from the score as well as adding parity significantly improved the prediction of success (ROC curves, AUC 0.88 vs 0.68, p<0.001). By taking 5% as the maximum risk of induction failure, a cutoff point of 4 for the new score makes it possible to induce labor in 90% of the women that were considered in the study (vs 26% or 60%, according to whether the cutoff point of the original Bishops score is set, respectively, at 7 or 6, p<0.001). CONCLUSION Cervical position and consistency are not necessary for predicting successful labor induction by oxytocin and amniotomy. We confirmed the usefulness of a simplified Bishop score that considers parity.

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