INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR THE TREATMENT OF
TWIN-TO-TWIN TRANSFUSION SYNDROME
"..so that babies and families who are suffering today will live and be happy"
Julian E. De Lia, MD, Founder and Director
St. Joseph Regional Medical Center
5000 West Chambers Street
Milwaukee, WI 53210-1688
414-447-3535
jedelia@covhealth.org
www.tttsmd.org
Twin-To-Twin Transfusion Syndrome:
Pathohysiology and Placental Laser Therapy
Julian E. De Lia, M.D.
Associate Clinical Professor
Medical College of Wisconsin
12-13 September 2002
Introduction
With the advent of ultrasound scanning, obstetricians can
now detect and treat abnormalities during early pregnancy
that may threaten continued intrauterine survival of the
fetus, or its survival immediately postpartum. Some of these
are abnormalities of the placenta, with the normal fetus
threatened secondarily (see De Lia JE: Surgery of the placenta
and umbilical cord. Clin Obstet Gynecol 1996;39:607-25).
In order to undertake placental therapy it is essential
to have a sound foundation in normal placental anatomy and,
more importantly, an understanding of the pathologic findings
therein. However, in some centers the ultrasound has led
to a paradigm shift, where these disorders are perceived
as abnormal video display images rather than maternal-fetal-placental
pathologic processes.
Fetoscopically delivered laser energy is now available to
treat placental abnormalities such as symptomatic placental
chorioangiomas, and the consequences of the chorioangiopagous
status of monochorionic twins: twin reversed arterial perfusion
(acardius syndrome or TRAP) with heart failure in the 'pump'
twin (see Arias F, et al.: Treatment of acardiac twinning.
Obstet Gynecol 1998;91:818-21), and the twin-twin transfusion
syndrome (see De Lia J, et al.: Fetoscopic laser occlusion
of chorioangiopagus in severe twin transfusion syndrome.
Obstet Gynecol 1990;75:1046-53). To date, laser surgery
has been used predominantly in twin-twin transfusion syndrome
(TTTS), therefore this presentation will focus on TTTS pathophysiology
and the role of fetoscopic laser occlusion of chorioangiopagous
vessels (FLOC procedure) in its treatment.
Twin-Twin Transfusion
Syndrome in Previable Gestations
Monozygotic (MZ) or identical twin pregnancies experience
high morbidity and mortality rates, particularly if the
twinning process occurs more than 4 days from fertilization.
Diamnionic monochorionic (DiMo) twins result from 4- to
8- day twinning and are the most common of MZ twins. Here,
the twins share a single or monochorionic (MC) placenta,
which explains excess morbidity and mortality when MZ multiples
are compared to fraternal (dizygous) twins or MZ twins with
separate (dichorionic) placentas. Since the identical twinning
process occurs within days of conception and has no known
etiology or cause, opportunities for physicians or couples
to exercise primary prevention of MZ twinning complications
are absent.
Although the majority of MC twin pregnancies are normal,
approximately 20% suffer complications that can be traced
to placental factors. The two MC placental factors include
abnormal blood vessels that connect the twins in the placenta
(chorioangiopagous vessels), and the tendency of their single
placenta (chorion surface and villi) to be shared either
equally or asymmetrically by the twins (see Machin G, et
al.: Correlations of placental vascular anatomy and clinical
outcomes in 69 monochorionic twin pregnancies Am J Med Genet
1996;61:229-36). The chorioangiopagous vessels, which seem
to occur by chance, can lead to the classically described
findings of chronic TTTS from imbalanced blood flow between
the twins. Severe chorion asymmetry may lead to growth restriction
and possible death of the twin with a small placental share.
The asymmetry may be caused by the variations in twin MC
embryoblasts’ orientation at implantation (see Gaziano
E, et al.: Diamnionic monochorionic twin gestations: An
overview. J Mat-Fetal Med 2000;9:89-96). If one MC twin
dies, a sudden hemorrhage (acute transfusion) may occur
from the live co-twin through the chorioangiopagous vessels
to the dead twin. Death or significant injury (ischemic
necrosis of somatic structures) from hypovolemia in the
surviving twin may then follow (see Okamura K, et al.: Funipuncture
for evaluation of hematologic and coagulation indicies in
the surviving twin following co-twin's death. Obstet Gynecol
1994;83:975-8).
The random variations in vascular anastomoses and placental
symmetry produce a syndrome that appears predominantly in
previable pregnancies (but may also occur at later gestational
ages with even greater clinical consequences), with varying
degrees of growth discordance and amniotic fluid changes
that may fluctuate in severity and, rarely, resolve spontaneously.
Monochorionic twin pregnancies with significant placental
asymmetry may explain some cases in which ultrasonographic
and placental findings are consistent with TTTS, but have
paradoxical or normal hematocrit values at birth or with
in utero umbilical cord blood sampling (see Mari G, et al:
"Pseudo" twin-twin transfusion syndrome and fetal
outcome. J Perinatol 1998;18:399-403). It is not currently
possible to determine by ultrasound the relative contribution
of transfused blood versus placental asymmetry in TTTS cases,
but the morbid fetal effects are similar and ultimately
depend on the chorioangiopagous status of the twins.
The number of MC twin pregnancies at risk of TTTS in the
United States (using CDC statistics) is approximately 3,800,
since 1:34 births (2.93%) are plural based on 2000 birth
record analysis (118,900 twin births X .33 identical X .66
monochorionic X .15 TTTS incidence). Recall that pregnancy
terminations and spontaneous losses prior to 20 weeks go
uncounted, therefore this estimate may be conservative.
Understandably, infertility treatments have contributed
to the rate of multiple birth. However, they have not reduced
the incidence of identical twins even though multiple embryos
are often produced. In contrast, studies show a higher rate
(3 – 15 X) of identical twins than would occur in
natural pregnancy in patients having these treatments (see
Derom C, et al.: Increased monozygotic twinning rate after
ovulation induction. Lancet 1987;1:1236-8, and Behr B, et
al.: Blastocyst-ET and monozygotic twinning. J Assisted
Reprod Genet 2000;17:349-51)
Patients with MC placental abnormalities present most often
with a 'large-for-dates' uterus, and subsequently show ultrasound
evidence of MC twins: like-sex fetuses, a single placental
disc, and a thin (amnions only) interfetal membrane septum.
Findings indicative of TTTS and/or placental asymmetry include:
discordant fetal growth, discordant amniotic sacs (polyhydramnios
in the recipient and oligohydramnios in the donor), and
occasionally hydrops (heart failure) in one twin. The prognosis
without treatment would depend on the patient's gestational
age, with more than 90% of fetuses dying in previable gestations
(<25 weeks - see Lopriore E, et al.: Twin-to-twin transfusion
syndrome: New perspectives. J Pediatr 1995;127:675-80).
In TTTS the polyhydramnios typically causes over-expansion
of the uterus, and pregnancy loss from premature rupture
of the membranes or pre-term labor follows. Surviving TTTS
fetuses may suffer complications related to chronic transfusion
(e.g., cardiac dysfunction, brain damage), prematurity,
growth restriction, and injuries related to the death of
a co-twin in utero. Monochorionic twins are at higher risk
(ranging from 4% to 25%) than dichorionic twins for intrauterine
death of a fetus, and neurologic sequelae occur in approximately
27% of the associated surviving co-twins (see Van Heteren
CF, et al.: Risk for surviving twin after death of co-twin
in twin-twin transfusion syndrome. Obstet Gynecol 1998;92:215-9
). These TTTS outcome data justify therapeutic interventions
to prevent abortion, prematurity, or in utero death of one
or both twins.
In addition to FLOC, treatments for previable TTTS pregnancies
have included:
1. Termination of the entire pregnancy, either actively or passively (i.e., letting nature take it course). These are not recorded and rarely reported, and most patients seem to be counseled on this option.
2. Selective termination of one fetus.
Modern methods that occlude the umbilical cord (PUCL) or
major fetal vessels are preferred in order to avoid death
or ischemic damage in the other fetus because of the twins’
chorioangiopagous status (see Challis D, et al.: Cord occlusion
techniques for selective termination in monochorionic twins.
J Perinat Med 1999;27:327-38, and Nicolini U, et al.: Complicated
monochorionic twin pregnancies: Experience with bipolar
cord coagulation. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2001;185:703-7).
3. Maternal digoxin therapy for fetal cardiac
failure. This has been anecdotally successful in TTTS cases
and in pump twin heart failure in acardiac twins (see Koike
T, et al.: Digitalization of the mother in treating hydrops
fetalis in monochorionic twin with Ebstein’s anomaly.
J Perinat Med 1997;25:295-7).
4. Indomethacin therapy to curtail amniotic
fluid production by decreasing fetal urine output. None
of three TTTS cases (20,23 and 25 weeks' gestation) in one
series seemed to respond and one of the two survivors developed
multicystic encephalomalacia following a co-twin's death
(see Jones J, et al.: Indomethacin in severe twin-to-twin
transfusion syndrome. Am J Perinatol 1993;10:24-6).
5. Aggressive therapeutic reduction amniocentesis
of the polyhydramnios is the most widely used therapy. It
relieves maternal discomfort and prolongs TTTS pregnancies
by reducing the risk of spontaneous rupture of the membranes.
Also, by reducing intrauterine pressure, it may improve
some TTTS cases by changing hemodynamics of the anastomoses.
Survival rates approach 80% in some centers, but health
status of surviving infants is not always reported (see
Dickinson J, et al.: Obstetric and perinatal outcomes from
The Australian and New Zealand Twin-Twin Transfusion Syndrome
Registry. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2000;182:706-12, and Mari
G, et al.: Perinatal morbidity and mortality in severe twin-twin
transfusion syndrome: Results of the International Amnioreduction
Registry. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2001;185:708-15. These papers
report a 60 -75% survival rate with amniocentesis, but 15
-30% of survivors had significant brain abnormalities on
neonatal head sonogram).
6. Amniotic septostomy (perforating the
interfetal membrane septum) to equilibrate the extremes
of amniotic fluid volumes seen in the sacs of TTTS fetuses
(see Johnson JR, et al.: Amnioreduction versus septostomy
in twin-twin transfusion syndrome. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2001;185:1044-7,
and Saade G, et al.: Amniotic septostomy for the treatment
of twin oligohydramnios-polyhydramnios sequence. Fetal Diagn
Ther 1998;13:86-93). In these series, the septostomy to
delivery interval was + 10 weeks and +81% of the twins survived.
The mean age at treatment was 20 weeks (range 17-27). Despite
the intentional creation of a functional monoamnionic sac
for the twins by membrane disruption (and concerns that
interfetal septum disruptions will lead to morbidity and
mortality rates equivalent to true monoamnionic twins),
no instances of amniotic band syndrome or umbilical cord
entanglement were seen. Neonatal morbidity in the survivors
was not reported. In recent case reports of septostomy as
an iatrogenic complication of serial reduction amniocenteses
for TTTS, cord entanglement was seen at delivery and one
survivor had severe cystic periventricular leukomalacia
of the brain.
7. Cerclage of the compromised cervix.
In the last two years centers have begun sonographic measurement
of cervical length in TTTS (see Skentou C, et al.: Prediction
of preterm delivery in twins by cervical assessment at 23
weeks. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol 2001;17:7-10). Cervical
evaluation is now an integral part of our treatment protocol,
and we consider this the ‘third variable’ of
our TTTS pathophysiology/treatment paradigm. Cervical shortening
or dilation, and/or funneling or internal os dilation may
occur in a significant number of patients secondarily from
the consequences of TTTS pathophysiology (i.e., polyhydramnios),
and may lead to early pregnancy loss. In 6 of our last 24
(25%) patients having FLOC, cerclage was performed prior
to transport to our center in two, prior to discharge from
our center in three, and once during follow-up at home,
for various degrees of distal cervical. The two patients
with cervical dilation required prolonged hospitalization
in addition to cerclage to achieve a successful outcome.
One review of prognostic factors for laser indicated that
volume of amniotic fluid drained at completion of laser
(an indirect measure of uterine size) correlated significantly
for delivery within the first four postoperative weeks (see
Zikulnig L, et al.: Prognostic factors in severe twin-twin
transfusion syndrome treated by endoscopic laser surgery.
Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol 1999;14:380-7).
8. Aggressive nutritional therapy. One
possible explanation for some seemingly enigmatic aspects
of TTTS pathophysiology may be maternal malnutrition, i.e.,
hypoproteinemia and anemia (see De Lia J, et al.: Maternal
metabolic abnormalities in previable twin-twin transfusion
syndrome. Twin Research 2000;3:113-7). We consider maternal
nutrition the ‘fourth variable’ in TTTS, and
recommend nutritional supplements (e.g., 2 to 3 cans per
day of Ensure or Boost High Protein) in all TTTS cases regardless
of severity or invasive treatment.
9. Tocolytic therapy with various agents
has been used alone and in combination with the treatments
in this list.
These alternatives to surgical interruption of anastomotic
vasculature are either symptomatic therapy (reduction amniocenteses,
septostomy, digoxin, indomethacin, tocolytics, nutrition
supplementation), or methods that create serious ethical
choices and/or a nihilistic outlook for the parents and
physician (pregnancy termination, feticide). Although all
these treatments may increase twin survival, complications
may be seen in the survivors since they fail to address
the pathophysiologic processes of severe TTTS in the placenta.
Comparisons among therapies are difficult as published studies
have varying inclusion criteria (e.g., reduction amniocentesis
studies recruit cases up to 28+ weeks, whereas we limit
FLOC to gestations < 25 weeks). In addition, many patients
with TTTS are managed with more that one therapy. No treatment
modality has been studied in a randomized manner because
of limited numbers in individual referral centers and because
of the ethical issues raised by withholding treatment in
a condition associated with >90% perinatal mortality
rate when left untreated (see Editorial Comment in Aust
NZ J Obstet Gynaecol 1995;36:16). By simply photocoagulating
the anastomotic vessels directly, FLOC has the advantage
of decreasing the duration of abnormal transfusion physiology
in the twins, as well as providing protection from the acute
interfetal hemorrhage should one twin die in utero.
Unlike most human organs approached surgically, anatomic
variations represent the norm rather than exception in the
placenta because no two are completely alike. In addition
to the location of the placenta within the uterus, MC placentas
vary in location and type of umbilical cord insertions (velamentous
versus central), location of the vascular equator in the
chorion plate, the type and number of anastomotic vessels
and the relationship of the interfetal membrane septum to
the vascular equator. The character of the anastomoses must
be determined visually by fetoscopic exploration of the
vascular equator. Chorioangiopagous vessels within the equator
may be direct (artery to artery, vein to vein) or indirect
(artery to vein) and transcotyledonary. In general placentas
from classic TTTS cases are characterized by a paucity of
direct A-A and V-V anastomoses when compared to MC placentas
without TTTS. Conversely, in TTTS associated with significant
placental asymmetry, direct anastomoses may predispose to
acute transfusion and death or ischemic damage in the survivor
with MC co-twin death.
The interfetal membrane septum becomes flattened on the
placental surface by the varying amniotic fluid volumes
of the twins with poly-/oligohydramnios sequence. It creates
a relatively opaque surface between fetoscope and the chorion
vasculature (see De Lia J, et al.: Placental surgery: A
new frontier. Placenta 1993;14:477-85). Variations in the
location and axis of the interfetal membrane septum (which
is rarely seen as shown in texts centrally located in the
common placenta) occur in MC placentas that are unrelated
to the MC vascular equator (recall their separate embryologic
origins). Therefore, the anastomotic vessels are not found
directly at the base of the septum. Most often the septum
is seen shifted toward and onto the donor's chorion. Occasionally,
one must photocoagulate recipient ‘s vessels at the
compressed septum edge to avoid leaving patent downstream
communications.
The shift of the septum onto the donor's chorion has major
implications for centers that used a modified FLOC technique
originally described in Europe (see Ville Y, et al.: Preliminary
experience with endoscopic laser surgery for severe twin-twin
transfusion syndrome. N Engl J Med 1995;332:224-7, and Deprest
J, et al.: Alternative technique for Nd:YAG laser coagulation
in twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome with anterior placenta.
Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol 1998;11:347-52). These centers
photocoagulated all vessels seen crossing the interfetal
membrane septum edge. Although this technique can occlude
downstream anastomoses in the equator, the interruption
of the vessels at the intersection of the septum and vessel
also destroyed significant amounts of the donor's normal
functioning placental. The technique threatened donor survival
and theoretical overall survival rates for FLOC. Iatrogenic
fetal losses utilizing the modified FLOC procedure may effect
negatively the results of the randomized trial by the Eurofetus
Group comparing the relative efficacy of FLOC versus therapeutic
reduction amniocentesis.
The duration of FLOC surgery is related to the number of
anastomoses (approximately eight per case), the character
of the amniotic fluid (clear or murky) and location of the
interfetal membrane septum. Puncture site bleeding into
the amniotic fluid is the Achilles heel of fetoscopy (about
10% of surgeries) for it limits the ability to see and fire
the laser. Our two channel operative fetoscope measures
3.5 mm in diameter. FLOC has proven effective in cases that
were refractory to reduction amniocentesis, and with hydropic
recipients that are often the target of feticidal procedures.
Postoperatively the donor increases its urinary output,
while the recipient's output returns to normal correcting
the polyhydramnios/oligohydramnios sequence by 2-3 weeks.
Recovery from the discordant fetal growth (which may be
a legitimate indicator of chronic transfusion from one fetus
to the other) may or may not occur after FLOC and seems
to be determined by placental symmetry factors.
Outcomes of the first twenty-six FLOC procedures for TTTS
performed at the University of Utah and Medical College
of Wisconsin have been reported (De Lia J, et al.: Fetoscopic
laser ablation of placental vessels to treat severe twin-twin
transfusion syndrome. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1995;172:1202-11).
That number has increased to 153 cases (most recent at St.
Joseph’s Hospital - Milwaukee), with the first 33
cases considered our 'learning curve'. Starting with the
34th case, we began to perform FLOC on patients with anterior
placenta implantations, which require exteriorizing the
uterus.
The 34th to 100th cases were analyzed recently to determine
the efficacy of FLOC subsequent to our learning curve (see
De Lia JE, et al.: Previable twin-twin transfusion syndrome
with fetoscopic laser surgery: Outcomes following the learning
curve. J Perinat Med 1999;27:61-7). These latter 67 patients
had a mean gestational age of 21.1 +1.7 weeks (range 18
- 24.5) with a mean fundal height of 33.1 cm when treated.
Eighteen (27%) had failed another treatment method before
FLOC. All 67 cases delivered with 82% (55/67) having at
least one surviving twin and 92/134 (69%) of the twins surviving
overall. Thirty-seven had surviving twins, 18 had one survivor
(6 neonatal and 12 fetal deaths), and 12 had none. The mean
duration of pregnancy following FLOC was 9.9 +5.5 weeks.
Only 4 of 93 (4.3%) survivors had significant handicaps
at a mean follow-up of 60 months (range 48 - 84). In the
last two years 90% have at least one survivor, overall survivor
rate is 75%, pregnancy is prolonged 11.1 weeks, and neurologic
handicap rate is < 2% (improvements we credit to cervical
evaluation and cerclage when indicated).
The data from colleagues in Europe indicate somewhat similar
infant outcomes and survival rates for FLOC - 73% at least
one survivor and 55% overall and neurologic injury in 4.2%
(see Ville Y, et al.: Endoscopic laser coagulation in the
management of severe twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome.
Brit J Obstet Gynaecol 1998;105:446-53). However, the photocoagulation
of vessels at the membrane septum edge rather than anastomoses
in the equator may explain why fewer cases have both fetuses
survive in Europe (36%) when compared to our cases (65%).
In addition, their rate of neurologic handicap is higher
(see Sutcliffe AG, et al.: Outcome for children born after
in utero laser ablation therapy for severe twin-to-twin
transfusion syndrome. . Brit J Obstet Gynaecol 2001;108:1246-50).
This may reflect incomplete separation of the twins’
circulations from by the limitations posed by a percutaneous
approach, rather than laparotomy as preferred in our center.
Technical challenges of FLOC include bleeding from the fetoscope
insertion site, stained amniotic fluid (in patients both
with and without a history of previous invasive procedures),
placental surface distortions or placentas that involved
two uterine surfaces. Most but not all of the surviving
twins with significant morbidity came from these cases.
Two couples elected termination of pregnancy within 2 weeks
after an incomplete FLOC, both of which were complicated
by the immediate postoperative death of one fetus and possible
cerebral changes in the surviving fetus on sonogram. We
had one case in which both fetuses survived with congenital
anophthalmia not thought to be a TTTS related anomaly. Significant
maternal complications included one spontaneous, complete
lung atelectasis (anesthetic complication) in a patient
with a history of asthma that resolved, and one patient
(No. 102) who had a wound disruption (incision separation)
severe enough to warrant pregnancy termination to effect
repair and healing. Maternal deaths have occurred after
FLOC in one U.S. center and two European centers, with the
two European deaths remote from surgery (one case each of
severe toxemia and placenta increta). Metabolically, all
women admitted for FLOC at our center demonstrated hypoproteinemia
and anemia (see above). The low colloid osmotic pressure
from reduced serum albumin may explain pulmonary edema reported
after fetal therapy or treatment of pre-term labor in multiple
gestation.
Conclusion
Twin-twin transfusion syndrome remains a severe complication
of monochorionic twinning and one of the most challenging
in contemporary perinatology. We use a dynamic TTTS paradigm
with four components, two fetal-placental (the anastomoses
and placenta sharing) and two maternal (nutrition and cervical
status). Although there are several treatment options available
for previable TTTS which result in a majority of twins surviving
and intact, FLOC is the only treatment method which can
limit the duration of severe TTTS fetal pathophysiology
(see Pietrantoni M, et al.: Mortality conference: Twin-to-twin
transfusion. J Pediatr 1998;132:1071-6). Although survival
rates and treatment to delivery intervals may be comparable,
the photocoagulation of all vascular anastomoses in the
vascular equator results in less neonatal morbidity than
other treatment methods. Comparative trials for different
treatment modalities are underway (see Hecker K, et al.:
Endoscopic surgery versus serial amniocenteses in the treatment
of severe twin-twin transfusion syndrome. Am J Obstet Gynecol
1999;180:717-24, and Johnson JR, et al.: Amnioreduction
versus septostomy in twin-twin transfusion syndrome. Am
J Obstet Gynecol 2001;185:1044-7). Given the nature of the
placental abnormalities and developmental anomalies in MC
twins, survival of all twins and elimination of all risk
for neurologic handicap in survivors may be impossible.
Ultimately, clinicians and parents alone must decide what
perinatal mortality rates and long-term morbidities are
acceptable when choosing a TTTS therapy.
Recommended Texts
Baldwin VJ. Pathology of Multiple Pregnancy. Springer-Verlag,
New York, 1994. P.199.
Benirschke K, Kaufmann P: Pathology of the Human Placenta.
4th ed. Springer-Verlag, New York, 2000, ISBN 0-387-98894-7