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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/V034537/1
Title: Assessing Placental Structure and Function by Unified Fluid Mechanical Modelling and in-vivo MRI
Principal Investigator: Alexander, Professor D
Other Investigators:
Hutter, Dr J Shipley, Professor RJ Story, Dr L
Hajnal, Professor JV
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Dr P J Slator
Project Partners:
Guy's & St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
Department: Computer Science
Organisation: UCL
Scheme: Standard Research
Starts: 01 August 2021 Ends: 31 July 2024 Value (£): 1,124,022
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Computer Graphics & Visual. Image & Vision Computing
Medical Imaging
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Healthcare
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
09 Feb 2021 Healthcare Technologies Investigator Led Panel Feb 2021 Announced
Summary on Grant Application Form
Our plan is to reduce poor pregnancy outcomes by creating a revolutionary way to assess and analyse the pregnancy environment. Specifically, we will establish specialised MRI (which is non-invasive and emits no ionising radiation) techniques focusing on women with high-risk pregnancies, which will enable personalised care and individualised treatments for mothers and babies.

The placenta (or afterbirth) is vital for a successful pregnancy, and most major pregnancy complications are associated with placental problems. Ultrasound is currently the main way to monitor pregnancies, however it has limitations: the whole placenta can't be seen at once, findings vary depending on who is performing it, and it cannot tell us how the placenta is functioning, only what it looks like. Ultrasound images can also be poor due to the baby's position and factors such as the mother's weight. We will use key features of MRI to enable a more detailed assessment of placental health - information on how the placenta is working and a more detailed picture of its structure. Although we can see clear changes in placental MRI scans for a number of important pregnancy complications, such as fetal growth restriction and pre-eclampsia, the specific changes in the placenta that affect the MRI signal are yet to be determined, not least because the relationship between the placenta's structure and how well it functions is complex. Techniques for detecting subtle placental changes would enable early and accurate diagnosis of pregnancy complications. In this project, we will develop such a technique by combining MRI with computational modelling to give valuable insight into how well the placenta is working.

First of all, we will build highly detailed computational models of whole placentas, incorporating fine structural details such as tissue and blood vessel dimensions. Next we will develop tools that can predict blood flow and oxygen levels in these computational placentas. We then use simulations to predict what MRI scans would look like for our computational placentas. Finally, using machine learning techniques, we will instruct an algorithm to learn from thousands of simulations on computational placentas, in order to deliver an imaging tool that, given a placental MRI scan as input, can show the structure, blood flow, and oxygen levels of the placenta.

By using this MRI-based tool to investigate pregnancies with complications, we will test its ability to identify cases where the placenta is not working properly. We will do this by comparing our tool with a post-pregnancy assessment of the delivered placenta by a specialised pathologist (many placental conditions, such as abnormal structure or poor blood supply, can currently only be diagnosed in this way). For multiple pregnant participants, we will use our MRI-based tool during the pregnancy to calculate values relating to placental structure and blood flow, then undertake an after delivery assessment of the placenta. This will allow us to test if our MRI-based tool can tell if the placenta is not working during pregnancy without having to wait for an after delivery assessment by a specialist pathologist. We will first explore ways of determining if problems with the placenta are caused by issues with the supply of maternal or fetal blood. This would be extremely important in clinical practice and in the future may allow focused treatment of the mother to reduce poor outcomes.

Showing differences between maternal and fetal blood supply problems is just one example of a diagnosis that cannot be during the pregnancy at present, and we use it here to demonstrate the potential of our model-driven placenta imaging tools in a directly impactful application. Further potential conditions that could be identified with the developed tools include damage to fetal villous trees (this is the detailed structure of the placenta), and levels of oxygen supply.

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