Fetal cardiac diagnostics in Indonesia: a study of screening and echocardiograph - Diskusi Dokter

general_alomedika

FREE OPEN ACCESS :https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/jpm-2025-0037/html Muhammad Adrianes Bachnas , Wiku Andonotopo , Adhi...

Diskusi Dokter

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  • Fetal cardiac diagnostics in Indonesia: a study of screening and echocardiograph

    Dibuat 17 April 2025, 12:39

    FREE OPEN ACCESS :

    https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/jpm-2025-0037/html

    Muhammad Adrianes Bachnas ORCID logo EMAIL logo , Wiku Andonotopo ORCID logo , Adhi Pribadi , Julian Dewantiningrum , Mochammad Besari Adi Pramono , Sri Sulistyowati , Milan Stanojevic and Asim Kurjak

    Abstract

    Introduction

    Congenital heart defects (CHDs) are a leading cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality globally. Accurate prenatal detection is crucial to improving neonatal outcomes. In Indonesia, two primary methods are used: fetal cardiac screening (FCS), which is accessible but limited in sensitivity (40–60 %), and fetal echocardiography (FE), the gold standard with over 90 % sensitivity but limited access due to infrastructural and financial challenges.

    Content

    This review analyzes Indonesia’s diagnostic disparities, highlighting how rural regions rely heavily on FCS, while FE remains restricted to urban centers. Emerging technologies, such as AI-enhanced diagnostics and telemedicine, show promise in bridging gaps by increasing FCS accuracy and extending access to FE through remote consultations.

    Summary

    AI has the potential to boost FCS sensitivity by up to 30 %, making it an effective preliminary screening tool, while telemedicine platforms connect rural practitioners to urban specialists. However, barriers like insufficient infrastructure, regulatory issues, and limited training hinder widespread adoption.

    Outlook

    Addressing these gaps requires standardized national protocols, capacity-building initiatives, and public-private partnerships to finance infrastructure and reduce costs. With technology integration and systemic reforms, Indonesia can achieve equitable CHD diagnostics, improving maternal and neonatal outcomes and aligning with global standards.

     

     

     

     


    10.1515_jpm-2025-0037-1_compressed.pdf