Gerard Breart - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Gerard Breart

Research paper thumbnail of Postpartum Maternal Mortality and Cesarean Delivery

Research paper thumbnail of Prospective Randomized Multicenter Comparison of High-Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation and Conventional Ventilation in Preterm Infants of Less Than 30 Weeks With Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Research paper thumbnail of Prospective Randomized Multicenter Comparison of High-Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation and Conventional Ventilation in Preterm Infants of Less Than 30 Weeks With Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Research paper thumbnail of Maternal deaths and substandard care: the results of a confidential survey in France

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1995

Confidential enquiries were carried out to attempt to understand why the level of maternal mortal... more Confidential enquiries were carried out to attempt to understand why the level of maternal mortality has been high in France. A descriptive retrospective survey has been carried out. Five administrative regions participated in the survey. All maternal deaths--according to the WHO definition--that occurred in these regions over a period of at least 1 year were studied. A specialist completed a full medical questionnaire for each death. Then a committee of medical experts determined the reasons for the death and whether it might have been avoided. Forty-six deaths were recorded, 39 of which were classified as maternal. Haemorrhages were the leading underlying cause, then embolism and hypertensive diseases. Of the 39 deaths, 17 were determined to have been certainly avoidable, and nine more probably avoidable. More than half of all maternal deaths were related to inappropriate or substandard care. These results are discussed in the light of the British and Dutch experience with confidential enquiries into maternal deaths. There is no clear explanation why the French maternal mortality rate is high, but the study points out some malfunctions in health care service.

Research paper thumbnail of Obstetric patients treated in intensive care units and maternal mortality

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1996

... 8 Critical obstetric problems Chairpersons: N. Patel, L. Lampe Obstetric patients treated in ... more ... 8 Critical obstetric problems Chairpersons: N. Patel, L. Lampe Obstetric patients treated in intensive care units and maternal mortality MarieHelene BouvierColle*, Benoit Salanave, PierreYves Ancel, Noelle Vamoux, Herve Femandez1', Emile Papiemik0, Gerard Breart" and ...

Research paper thumbnail of Is planned vaginal delivery for breech presentation at term still an option? Results of an observational prospective survey in France and Belgium

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Laparoscopic surgery is not inherently dangerous for patients presenting with benign gynaecologic pathology. Results of a meta-analysis

Research paper thumbnail of Relation between pain symptoms and the anatomic location of deep infiltrating endometriosis

Fertility and Sterility, 2002

To investigate whether specific types of pelvic pain are correlated with the anatomic locations o... more To investigate whether specific types of pelvic pain are correlated with the anatomic locations of deeply infiltrating endometriosis (DIE). Retrospective data analysis. University tertiary referral center. Two hundred and twenty-five women with pelvic pain symptoms and DIE. During surgery, we recorded the anatomic locations of DIE implants and associated endometriosis. We studied the incidence of pelvic pain symptoms including severe dysmenorrhea, deep dyspareunia, noncyclic chronic pelvic pain, painful defecation during menstruation, urinary tract symptoms, and gastrointestinal symptoms as related to the location of DIE. The frequency of severe dysmenorrhea increased with Douglas pouch adhesions and decreased with parity. The frequency of dyspareunia increased with a uterosacral ligament DIE location and decreased when it involved the bladder. The frequency of noncyclic chronic pelvic pain was higher when it involved the bowel and was lower for women who were treated for infertility. The frequency of painful defecation during menstruation was higher when DIE involved the vagina; lower urinary tract symptoms were more frequent when DIE involved the bladder and less frequent in women with a lower body mass index. Gastrointestinal symptoms were associated with bowel or vaginal DIE locations. The types of pelvic pain are related to the anatomic location of DIE. Knowledge of the characteristics of pelvic pain symptoms is important in the preoperative assessment of patients with suspected DIE.

Research paper thumbnail of Delayed childbearing

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1997

Research paper thumbnail of How does early ultrasound scan estimation of gestational age lead to higher rates of preterm birth

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2002

Early ultrasound scanning estimation of gestational age is known to increase the reported preterm... more Early ultrasound scanning estimation of gestational age is known to increase the reported preterm delivery rate (<37 completed weeks) compared with estimation by date of the last normal menstrual period, but it is unclear how this systematic difference arises. This study was a hospital-based study of 44,623 women who delivered a live-born or stillborn infant between January 1, 1978, and March 31, 1996, and who had both last normal menstrual period-based and early (usually at 16-18 weeks) ultrasound scan-based gestational age estimates. Cross-classification of the 2 estimates by completed weeks was used to examine the direction and magnitude of the differences between them and to compare the resulting classifications of preterm birth. The early ultrasound scan-based gestational age distribution was shifted uniformly to the left (ie, lower gestational age) relative to the last normal menstrual period gestational age distribution; the early ultrasound scan-based preterm delivery rate was 9.1%, which was 19.5% (n = 659 births) higher than the 7.6% rate by last normal menstrual period (P <.0001). The last normal menstrual period estimate exceeded the early ultrasound scan estimate far more often than the reverse, up to and including early ultrasound scan estimates of 40 weeks. No concentration of 4-week discrepancies was observed in either direction, as would be expected with random or systematic errors in recall of the last normal menstrual period. The absolute number of births at 37 to 39 weeks of gestation (by last normal menstrual period) that were reclassified as preterm (n = 1206 births) was much higher than the number of preterm births at 34 to 36 weeks of gestation that were reclassified as term (n = 581 births). The net increase of 625 preterm births (from 581 to 1206 births) that resulted from reclassification of births at 37 to 39 last normal menstrual period weeks accounted for 95% of the total 659-birth increase in early ultrasound scan-based preterm births at all last normal menstrual period gestational ages. Early ultrasound scanning reduces the gestational age estimate across the entire gestational age range; early ultrasound scan-based reclassification of gestational age results in a substantial increase in the prevalence of preterm births. Small downward reclassifications exceed upward reclassifications of similar magnitude, which is consistent with previous reports that delayed (>14 days) ovulation is more frequent than early (<14 days) ovulation.

Research paper thumbnail of A New and Improved Population-Based Canadian Reference for Birth Weight for Gestational Age

Research paper thumbnail of Do Markers of Bone Resorption Add to Bone Mineral Density and Ultrasonographic Heel Measurement for the Prediction of Hip Fracture in Elderly Women? The EPIDOS Prospective Study

Osteoporosis International, 1998

We have previously shown that hip bone mineral density (BMD), heel broadband ultrasound attenuati... more We have previously shown that hip bone mineral density (BMD), heel broadband ultrasound attenuation (BUA) and bone resorption markers are independent predictors of hip fracture in elderly women. We investigated whether a combination of these three parameters could improve the predictive value of a single test in a nested case–control analysis (75 hip fractures and 228 age-matched controls) of the EPIDOS prospective study comprising 7598 healthy women 75 years of age and older followed prospectively for a mean 22 months. At baseline, prior fracture, femoral neck BMD by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), heel BUA and urinary type I collagen C-telopeptide breakdown products (CTX) were assessed. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was significant for the three diagnostic tests, heel BUA being the best single predictor. The added value of urinary CTX to either BMD or BUA depends on the cutoff point chosen to define patients at risk and on the therapeutic strategy that is considered. Defining patients at risk as those with low BMD (or low BUA) or high CTX resulted in a significant increase in the sensitivity compared with BMD or BUA alone – a strategy that could be applied when a broad treatment is considered. However, this increased sensitivity was also obtained simply by increasing the BMD and BUA cutoffs, suggesting that a combination of CTX with BMD/BUA is not useful for that type of treatment strategy. Conversely, defining patients at risk as those with both low BMD and high CTX increases the specificity (88% vs 78%) with a similar number of hip fracture patients being identified (30% vs 32%) – a combination that could be useful when the strategy is to target treatment to a subset of high-risk patients. This strategy appears to be more cost-effective than bone mass measurement alone as indicated by the 37% fewer patients who need to be treated to avoid one fracture per year. If DXA or ultrasound is not available, the combination of a bone resorption marker with a history of any type of fracture after the age of 50 years gave a predictive value similar to that obtained with femoral neck BMD or heel BUA alone, for both types of treatment strategy. We conclude that the combination of urinary CTX with hip BMD could be useful for the identification of elderly women at high risk for hip fracture, resulting in higher specificity for a given sensitivity threshold than BMD measurement alone. If DXA is not available, the combination of history of fracture and urinary CTX performs as well as hip BMD to assess hip fracture risk in elderly women.

Research paper thumbnail of Off label and unlicensed drug use among French office based paediatricians

Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of How Hip and Whole-Body Bone Mineral Density Predict Hip Fracture in Elderly Women: The EPIDOS Prospective Study

Osteoporosis International, 1998

We conducted a population-based cohort study in 7598 white healthy women, aged 75 years and over,... more We conducted a population-based cohort study in 7598 white healthy women, aged 75 years and over, recruited from the voting lists. We measured at baseline bone mineral density (BMD g/cm2) of the proximal femur (neck, trochanter and Ward's triangle) and the whole body, as well as fat and lean body mass, by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). One hundred and fifty-four women underwent a hip fracture during an average 2 years follow-up. Each standard deviation decrease in BMD increased the risk of hip fracture adjusted for age, weight and centre by 1.9 (95% CL 1.5, 2.3) for the femoral neck, 2.6 times (2.0, 3.3) for the trochanter, 1.8 times (1.4, 2.2) for Ward's triangle, 1.6 times (1.2, 2.0) for the whole body, and 1.3 times (1.0, 1.5) for the fat mass. The areas under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were not significantly different between trochanter and femoral neck BMD, whereas ROC curves of femoral neck and trochanter BMD were significantly better than those for Ward's triangle and whole-body BMD. emsp;Women who sustained an intertrochanteric fracture were older (84 ± 4.5 years) than women who had a cervical fracture (81 ± 4.5 years) and trochanter BMD seemed to be a stronger predictor of intertrochanteric ([RR = 4.5 (3.1, 6.5)] than cervical fractures ([RR = 1.8 (1.5, 2.3]). emsp;In very elderly women aged 80 years and more, hip BMD was still a significant predictor of hip fracture but the relative risk was significantly lower than in women younger than 80 years. emsp;In the 48% of women who had a femoral neck BMD T-score less than –2.5, the relative risk of hip fracture was increased by 3, and the unadjusted incidence of hip fracture was 16.4 per 1000 woman-years compared with 1.1 in the population with a femoral neck BMD T-score 5–1.

Research paper thumbnail of Fall-related factors and risk of hip fracture: the EPIDOS prospective study

Research paper thumbnail of Sensory Impairments and Physical Disability in Aged Women Living at Home

Research paper thumbnail of A New and Improved Population-Based Canadian Reference for Birth Weight for Gestational Age

Research paper thumbnail of Case-control study of risk factors for obstetric patients' admission to intensive care units

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1997

Research paper thumbnail of Neurodevelopmental disabilities and special care of 5-year-old children born before 33 weeks of gestation (the EPIPAGE study): a longitudinal cohort study

Research paper thumbnail of White matter damage and intraventricular hemorrhage in very preterm infants: the EPIPAGE study

Journal of Pediatrics, 2003

To evaluate the prevalence of cranial ultrasound abnormalities in very preterm infants as a funct... more To evaluate the prevalence of cranial ultrasound abnormalities in very preterm infants as a function of gestational age, plurality, intrauterine growth restriction, and death before discharge. A prospective, population-based cohort of 2667 infants born between 22 and 32 weeks of gestation in 1997 in nine regions of France, transferred to a neonatal intensive care unit, for whom at least one cranial ultrasound scan was available. The frequencies of white matter damage (WMD), major WMD, cystic periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), periventricular parenchymal hemorrhagic involvement, and intraventricular hemorrhage with ventricular dilatation were 21%, 8%, 5%, 3%, and 3%, respectively. The risk of WMD increased with decreasing gestational age. Mean age at diagnosis of cystic PVL was older for the most premature infants. Intraventricular hemorrhage with ventricular dilatation was associated with a higher risk of cystic PVL. Intrauterine growth restriction was not associated with a lower prevalence of cystic PVL. The frequency of WMD is high in very preterm babies and is strongly related to gestational age. The incidence of cystic PVL did not differ between babies with intrauterine growth restriction and babies who were appropriate for gestational age.

Research paper thumbnail of Postpartum Maternal Mortality and Cesarean Delivery

Research paper thumbnail of Prospective Randomized Multicenter Comparison of High-Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation and Conventional Ventilation in Preterm Infants of Less Than 30 Weeks With Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Research paper thumbnail of Prospective Randomized Multicenter Comparison of High-Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation and Conventional Ventilation in Preterm Infants of Less Than 30 Weeks With Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Research paper thumbnail of Maternal deaths and substandard care: the results of a confidential survey in France

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1995

Confidential enquiries were carried out to attempt to understand why the level of maternal mortal... more Confidential enquiries were carried out to attempt to understand why the level of maternal mortality has been high in France. A descriptive retrospective survey has been carried out. Five administrative regions participated in the survey. All maternal deaths--according to the WHO definition--that occurred in these regions over a period of at least 1 year were studied. A specialist completed a full medical questionnaire for each death. Then a committee of medical experts determined the reasons for the death and whether it might have been avoided. Forty-six deaths were recorded, 39 of which were classified as maternal. Haemorrhages were the leading underlying cause, then embolism and hypertensive diseases. Of the 39 deaths, 17 were determined to have been certainly avoidable, and nine more probably avoidable. More than half of all maternal deaths were related to inappropriate or substandard care. These results are discussed in the light of the British and Dutch experience with confidential enquiries into maternal deaths. There is no clear explanation why the French maternal mortality rate is high, but the study points out some malfunctions in health care service.

Research paper thumbnail of Obstetric patients treated in intensive care units and maternal mortality

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1996

... 8 Critical obstetric problems Chairpersons: N. Patel, L. Lampe Obstetric patients treated in ... more ... 8 Critical obstetric problems Chairpersons: N. Patel, L. Lampe Obstetric patients treated in intensive care units and maternal mortality MarieHelene BouvierColle*, Benoit Salanave, PierreYves Ancel, Noelle Vamoux, Herve Femandez1', Emile Papiemik0, Gerard Breart" and ...

Research paper thumbnail of Is planned vaginal delivery for breech presentation at term still an option? Results of an observational prospective survey in France and Belgium

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Laparoscopic surgery is not inherently dangerous for patients presenting with benign gynaecologic pathology. Results of a meta-analysis

Research paper thumbnail of Relation between pain symptoms and the anatomic location of deep infiltrating endometriosis

Fertility and Sterility, 2002

To investigate whether specific types of pelvic pain are correlated with the anatomic locations o... more To investigate whether specific types of pelvic pain are correlated with the anatomic locations of deeply infiltrating endometriosis (DIE). Retrospective data analysis. University tertiary referral center. Two hundred and twenty-five women with pelvic pain symptoms and DIE. During surgery, we recorded the anatomic locations of DIE implants and associated endometriosis. We studied the incidence of pelvic pain symptoms including severe dysmenorrhea, deep dyspareunia, noncyclic chronic pelvic pain, painful defecation during menstruation, urinary tract symptoms, and gastrointestinal symptoms as related to the location of DIE. The frequency of severe dysmenorrhea increased with Douglas pouch adhesions and decreased with parity. The frequency of dyspareunia increased with a uterosacral ligament DIE location and decreased when it involved the bladder. The frequency of noncyclic chronic pelvic pain was higher when it involved the bowel and was lower for women who were treated for infertility. The frequency of painful defecation during menstruation was higher when DIE involved the vagina; lower urinary tract symptoms were more frequent when DIE involved the bladder and less frequent in women with a lower body mass index. Gastrointestinal symptoms were associated with bowel or vaginal DIE locations. The types of pelvic pain are related to the anatomic location of DIE. Knowledge of the characteristics of pelvic pain symptoms is important in the preoperative assessment of patients with suspected DIE.

Research paper thumbnail of Delayed childbearing

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1997

Research paper thumbnail of How does early ultrasound scan estimation of gestational age lead to higher rates of preterm birth

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2002

Early ultrasound scanning estimation of gestational age is known to increase the reported preterm... more Early ultrasound scanning estimation of gestational age is known to increase the reported preterm delivery rate (<37 completed weeks) compared with estimation by date of the last normal menstrual period, but it is unclear how this systematic difference arises. This study was a hospital-based study of 44,623 women who delivered a live-born or stillborn infant between January 1, 1978, and March 31, 1996, and who had both last normal menstrual period-based and early (usually at 16-18 weeks) ultrasound scan-based gestational age estimates. Cross-classification of the 2 estimates by completed weeks was used to examine the direction and magnitude of the differences between them and to compare the resulting classifications of preterm birth. The early ultrasound scan-based gestational age distribution was shifted uniformly to the left (ie, lower gestational age) relative to the last normal menstrual period gestational age distribution; the early ultrasound scan-based preterm delivery rate was 9.1%, which was 19.5% (n = 659 births) higher than the 7.6% rate by last normal menstrual period (P <.0001). The last normal menstrual period estimate exceeded the early ultrasound scan estimate far more often than the reverse, up to and including early ultrasound scan estimates of 40 weeks. No concentration of 4-week discrepancies was observed in either direction, as would be expected with random or systematic errors in recall of the last normal menstrual period. The absolute number of births at 37 to 39 weeks of gestation (by last normal menstrual period) that were reclassified as preterm (n = 1206 births) was much higher than the number of preterm births at 34 to 36 weeks of gestation that were reclassified as term (n = 581 births). The net increase of 625 preterm births (from 581 to 1206 births) that resulted from reclassification of births at 37 to 39 last normal menstrual period weeks accounted for 95% of the total 659-birth increase in early ultrasound scan-based preterm births at all last normal menstrual period gestational ages. Early ultrasound scanning reduces the gestational age estimate across the entire gestational age range; early ultrasound scan-based reclassification of gestational age results in a substantial increase in the prevalence of preterm births. Small downward reclassifications exceed upward reclassifications of similar magnitude, which is consistent with previous reports that delayed (>14 days) ovulation is more frequent than early (<14 days) ovulation.

Research paper thumbnail of A New and Improved Population-Based Canadian Reference for Birth Weight for Gestational Age

Research paper thumbnail of Do Markers of Bone Resorption Add to Bone Mineral Density and Ultrasonographic Heel Measurement for the Prediction of Hip Fracture in Elderly Women? The EPIDOS Prospective Study

Osteoporosis International, 1998

We have previously shown that hip bone mineral density (BMD), heel broadband ultrasound attenuati... more We have previously shown that hip bone mineral density (BMD), heel broadband ultrasound attenuation (BUA) and bone resorption markers are independent predictors of hip fracture in elderly women. We investigated whether a combination of these three parameters could improve the predictive value of a single test in a nested case–control analysis (75 hip fractures and 228 age-matched controls) of the EPIDOS prospective study comprising 7598 healthy women 75 years of age and older followed prospectively for a mean 22 months. At baseline, prior fracture, femoral neck BMD by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), heel BUA and urinary type I collagen C-telopeptide breakdown products (CTX) were assessed. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was significant for the three diagnostic tests, heel BUA being the best single predictor. The added value of urinary CTX to either BMD or BUA depends on the cutoff point chosen to define patients at risk and on the therapeutic strategy that is considered. Defining patients at risk as those with low BMD (or low BUA) or high CTX resulted in a significant increase in the sensitivity compared with BMD or BUA alone – a strategy that could be applied when a broad treatment is considered. However, this increased sensitivity was also obtained simply by increasing the BMD and BUA cutoffs, suggesting that a combination of CTX with BMD/BUA is not useful for that type of treatment strategy. Conversely, defining patients at risk as those with both low BMD and high CTX increases the specificity (88% vs 78%) with a similar number of hip fracture patients being identified (30% vs 32%) – a combination that could be useful when the strategy is to target treatment to a subset of high-risk patients. This strategy appears to be more cost-effective than bone mass measurement alone as indicated by the 37% fewer patients who need to be treated to avoid one fracture per year. If DXA or ultrasound is not available, the combination of a bone resorption marker with a history of any type of fracture after the age of 50 years gave a predictive value similar to that obtained with femoral neck BMD or heel BUA alone, for both types of treatment strategy. We conclude that the combination of urinary CTX with hip BMD could be useful for the identification of elderly women at high risk for hip fracture, resulting in higher specificity for a given sensitivity threshold than BMD measurement alone. If DXA is not available, the combination of history of fracture and urinary CTX performs as well as hip BMD to assess hip fracture risk in elderly women.

Research paper thumbnail of Off label and unlicensed drug use among French office based paediatricians

Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of How Hip and Whole-Body Bone Mineral Density Predict Hip Fracture in Elderly Women: The EPIDOS Prospective Study

Osteoporosis International, 1998

We conducted a population-based cohort study in 7598 white healthy women, aged 75 years and over,... more We conducted a population-based cohort study in 7598 white healthy women, aged 75 years and over, recruited from the voting lists. We measured at baseline bone mineral density (BMD g/cm2) of the proximal femur (neck, trochanter and Ward's triangle) and the whole body, as well as fat and lean body mass, by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). One hundred and fifty-four women underwent a hip fracture during an average 2 years follow-up. Each standard deviation decrease in BMD increased the risk of hip fracture adjusted for age, weight and centre by 1.9 (95% CL 1.5, 2.3) for the femoral neck, 2.6 times (2.0, 3.3) for the trochanter, 1.8 times (1.4, 2.2) for Ward's triangle, 1.6 times (1.2, 2.0) for the whole body, and 1.3 times (1.0, 1.5) for the fat mass. The areas under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were not significantly different between trochanter and femoral neck BMD, whereas ROC curves of femoral neck and trochanter BMD were significantly better than those for Ward's triangle and whole-body BMD. emsp;Women who sustained an intertrochanteric fracture were older (84 ± 4.5 years) than women who had a cervical fracture (81 ± 4.5 years) and trochanter BMD seemed to be a stronger predictor of intertrochanteric ([RR = 4.5 (3.1, 6.5)] than cervical fractures ([RR = 1.8 (1.5, 2.3]). emsp;In very elderly women aged 80 years and more, hip BMD was still a significant predictor of hip fracture but the relative risk was significantly lower than in women younger than 80 years. emsp;In the 48% of women who had a femoral neck BMD T-score less than –2.5, the relative risk of hip fracture was increased by 3, and the unadjusted incidence of hip fracture was 16.4 per 1000 woman-years compared with 1.1 in the population with a femoral neck BMD T-score 5–1.

Research paper thumbnail of Fall-related factors and risk of hip fracture: the EPIDOS prospective study

Research paper thumbnail of Sensory Impairments and Physical Disability in Aged Women Living at Home

Research paper thumbnail of A New and Improved Population-Based Canadian Reference for Birth Weight for Gestational Age

Research paper thumbnail of Case-control study of risk factors for obstetric patients' admission to intensive care units

European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 1997

Research paper thumbnail of Neurodevelopmental disabilities and special care of 5-year-old children born before 33 weeks of gestation (the EPIPAGE study): a longitudinal cohort study

Research paper thumbnail of White matter damage and intraventricular hemorrhage in very preterm infants: the EPIPAGE study

Journal of Pediatrics, 2003

To evaluate the prevalence of cranial ultrasound abnormalities in very preterm infants as a funct... more To evaluate the prevalence of cranial ultrasound abnormalities in very preterm infants as a function of gestational age, plurality, intrauterine growth restriction, and death before discharge. A prospective, population-based cohort of 2667 infants born between 22 and 32 weeks of gestation in 1997 in nine regions of France, transferred to a neonatal intensive care unit, for whom at least one cranial ultrasound scan was available. The frequencies of white matter damage (WMD), major WMD, cystic periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), periventricular parenchymal hemorrhagic involvement, and intraventricular hemorrhage with ventricular dilatation were 21%, 8%, 5%, 3%, and 3%, respectively. The risk of WMD increased with decreasing gestational age. Mean age at diagnosis of cystic PVL was older for the most premature infants. Intraventricular hemorrhage with ventricular dilatation was associated with a higher risk of cystic PVL. Intrauterine growth restriction was not associated with a lower prevalence of cystic PVL. The frequency of WMD is high in very preterm babies and is strongly related to gestational age. The incidence of cystic PVL did not differ between babies with intrauterine growth restriction and babies who were appropriate for gestational age.