Ilan Timor
New York University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ilan Timor.
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2005
Tracy Shevell; Fergal D. Malone; John Vidaver; T.F. Porter; David A. Luthy; Christine H. Comstock; Gary D.V. Hankins; Keith Eddleman; Siobhan M. Dolan; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Diana W. Bianchi; Mary E. D'Alton
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the use of assisted reproductive technology (ART) is associated with an increase in chromosomal abnormalities, fetal malformations, or adverse pregnancy outcomes. METHODS: A prospective database from a large multicenter investigation of singleton pregnancies, the First And Second Trimester Evaluation of Risk trial, was examined. Subjects were divided into 3 groups: no ART use, use of ovulation induction (with or without intrauterine insemination), and use of in vitro fertilization (IVF). Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to assess association between ART and adverse pregnancy outcomes (significance of differences was accepted at P < .05). RESULTS: A total of 36,062 pregnancies were analyzed: 34,286 (95.1%) were spontaneously conceived, 1,222 (3.4%) used ovulation induction, and 554 (1.5%) used IVF. There was no association between ART and fetal growth restriction, aneuploidy, or fetal anomalies after adjustment for age, race, marital status, years of education, prior preterm delivery, prior fetal anomaly, body mass index, smoking history, and bleeding in the current pregnancy. Ovulation induction was associated with a statistically significant increase in placental abruption, fetal loss after 24 weeks, and gestational diabetes after adjustment. Use of IVF was associated with a statistically significant increase in preeclampsia, gestational hypertension, placental abruption, placenta previa, and risk of cesarean delivery. CONCLUSION: Patients who undergo IVF are at increased risk for several adverse pregnancy outcomes. Although many of these risks are not seen in patients undergoing ovulation induction, several adverse pregnancy outcomes are still increased in this group. There was no increased incidence of fetal chromosomal or structural abnormalities in the women who used any type of ART compared with the women who conceived spontaneously. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II-2
Prenatal Diagnosis | 2008
Howard Cuckle; Fergal D. Malone; David Wright; T. Flint Porter; David A. Nyberg; Christine H. Comstock; George R. Saade; Richard L. Berkowitz; Jose Carlos Ferreira; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R. Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Mary E. D'Alton
Comparison of contingent, step‐wise and integrated screening policies.
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2008
Radek Bukowski; Tatsuo Uchida; Gordon C. S. Smith; Fergal D. Malone; Robert H. Ball; David A. Nyberg; Christine H. Comstock; Gary D.V. Hankins; Richard L. Berkowitz; Susan J. Gross; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R. Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Mary E. D'Alton
OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate that individualized optimal fetal growth norms, accounting for physiologic and pathologic determinants of fetal growth, better identify normal and abnormal outcomes of pregnancy than existing methods. METHODS: In a prospective cohort of 38,033 singleton pregnancies, we identified 9,818 women with a completely normal outcome of pregnancy and characterized the physiologic factors affecting birth weight using multivariable regression. We used those physiologic factors to individually predict optimal growth trajectory and its variation, growth potential, for each fetus in the entire cohort. By comparing actual birth weight with growth potential, population, ultrasound, and customized norms, we calculated for each fetus achieved percentiles, by each norm. We then compared proportions of pregnancies classified as normally grown, between 10th and 90th percentile, or aberrantly grown, outside this interval, by growth potential and traditional norms, in 14,229 complicated pregnancies, 1,518 pregnancies with diabetes or hypertensive disorders, and 1,347 pregnancies with neonatal complications. RESULTS: Nineteen physiologic factors, associated with maternal characteristics and early placental function, were identified. Growth potential norms correctly classified significantly more pregnancies than population, ultrasound, or customized norms in complicated pregnancies (26.4% compared with 18.3%, 18.7%, 22.8%, respectively, all P<.05), pregnancies with diabetes or hypertensive disorders (37.3% compared with 23.0%, 28.0%, 34.0%, respectively, all P<.05) and neonatal complications (33.3% compared with 19.7%, 24.9%, 29.8%, respectively, all P<.05). CONCLUSION: Growth potential norms based on the physiologic determinants of birth weight are a better discriminator of aberrations of fetal growth than traditional norms. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II
Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2009
Mary E. D'Alton; Jane Cleary-Goldman; Geralyn Lambert-Messerlian; Robert H. Ball; David A. Nyberg; Christine H. Comstock; Radek Bukowski; Richard L. Berkowitz; P. Dar; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R. Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Kimberly Dukes; Jacob A. Canick; Fergal D. Malone
To evaluate nuchal translucency measurement quality assurance techniques in a large‐scale study.
Case Reports in Perinatal Medicine | 2012
Ashwin Jadhav; Ana Monteagudo; R. Santos; Ilan Timor
Abstract Orofacial clefts are the most common group of craniofacial anomalies. The detection rate of cleft lip during the mid-trimester, using two-dimensional (2D) ultrasound screening, has improved over the last three decades. However, the detection rates of defects involving the hard palate or isolated cleft palate have remained poor. Over the last decade, many investigators have studied the use of 3D ultrasound to improve the detection rates of these defects. With the increasing use and acceptance of first-trimester aneuploidy screening in the US, there is growing interest in performing first-trimester fetal anatomy surveys. Reports of first-trimester diagnosis of cleft lip and palate are rare, and this aspect of prenatal sonographic diagnosis remains underexplored. We report a case of unilateral cleft lip and cleft palate diagnosed during a routine first-trimester screening at 12 weeks’ gestation and review the pertinent literature on first-trimester diagnosis of cleft lip/palate.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2003
Fergal D. Malone; Nicholas J. Wald; Jacob A. Canick; Robert H. Ball; David A. Nyberg; Christine H. Comstock; Radek Bukowski; Richard L. Berkowitz; Susan J. Gross; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R. Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Kimberly Dukes; Diana W. Bianchi; Alicja R. Rudnicka; Allan Hackshaw; Geralyn Lambert-Messerlian; Mary E. D'Alton
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2004
Fergal D. Malone; David A. Nyberg; John Vidaver; Robert H. Ball; Christine H. Comstock; George R. Saade; Richard L. Berkowitz; Susan Gross; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R. Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Jacob A. Canick; Mary E. D'Alton
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2003
Keith Eddleman; Richard L. Berkowitz; Yara Kharbutli; Fergal D. Malone; John Vidaver; T. Flint Porter; David A. Luthy; Christine H. Comstock; George R. Saade; Susan Klugman; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R. Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Mary E. D'Alton
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2003
Fergal Malone; Nicholas J. Wald; Jacob Canick; Robert H. Ball; David A Nyberg; Christine H. Comstock; George Saade; Richard L. Berkowitz; Susan J. Gross; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Lisa Sullivan; Alicja R. Rudnicka; Ak Hackshaw; Geralyn Lambert-Messerlian; Mary D'Alton
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2003
Fergal D. Malone; Robert H. Ball; David A. Nyberg; Christine H. Comstock; George R. Saade; Richard L. Berkowitz; Susan J. Gross; Lorraine Dugoff; Sabrina D. Craigo; Ilan Timor; Stephen R. Carr; Honor M. Wolfe; Tara Tripp; Mary E. D'Alton