Selective fetal growth restriction (sFGR) occurs when twins sharing a placenta — known as identical, monochorionic twins — experience an uneven distribution of this vital organ. sFGR can result in one fetus not receiving enough nutrients and oxygen and therefore growing slower than the other fetus. Selective fetal growth restriction is reported in about 15 percent of monochorionic twins.
Boston Children's Fetal Care and Surgery Center (FCSC), in affiliation with Brigham and Women’s Hospital and in collaboration with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, is taking part in an international, multicenter study examining ways to better predict how the fetuses affected by sFGR will do as they grow in utero. The “selective fetal growth restriction monoChOrioNic Twins — an inteRnAtional inveSTigation” (CONTRAST) study is a joint effort between Boston Children’s Hospital, Leiden University Medical Centre, the UZ Leuven, Karolinska University Hospital), BCNatal Fetal Medicine Research Center, and Mount Sinai Hospital (Toronto, Canada). The study has been approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB#: IRB-P00046170) and registered under the ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT05952583.