BACKGROUND number of respiratory events per hour of sleep). Decisions regarding surgical timing (fetal vs postnatal), technique (open fetal vs fetoscopic approach), and SDB treatment were made by the clinical teams. RESULTS Among 173 infants, 92/173 (53%) had SDB (median AHI 22.5, IQR 12.2–44.2). In unadjusted analysis, AHI was higher among the 90 neonates with fetal repair vs 83 with postnatal surgery (median 29, IQR 14–49, vs 19, IQR 10–36, P = .008). In propensity-adjusted multivariable models, prematurity was independently associated with AHI, whereas surgical timing (fetal vs postnatal) was not. Hindbrain herniation, myelomeningocele level, and clinical need for ventriculoperitoneal shunt did not predict AHI in adjusted models. Supplemental oxygen was commonly prescribed, for 44% of fetal vs 39% of postnatal myelomeningocele repair infants (P = .5). CONCLUSIONS SDB affects more than half of neonates with myelomeningocele. The higher AHI after fetal surgery could stem from the elevated incidence of prematurity in this group. As SDB is treatable and has a potential impact on neurodevelopment, routine screening could become an integral part of a strategy to optimize long-term medical and neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Shellhaas et al. (Fri,) studied this question.