I haven't been able to find anything as comprehensive as the 1993 study, and I certainly think it should be replicated now that ultrasound imaging has changed.
Yes, in an ideal world it should be replicated, but do remember that no one wants to waste their academic time researching things that are held to be true. Scientists are people with egos and career-pressures too.
Places that are doing the research are places like Columbia; I can't read the papers in Spanish, but google translates of the abstracts all seem to come to the conclusion of "we're not picking up enough fetal anomolies to change outcome, and we think this is because we need better ultrasound equipment."
However, I don't see why the burden of proof is on me considering that most medical recommendations have been to avoid routine ultrasounds, and that includes the 20-week scan considering it's offered to all women regardless of risk status in most countries.
The burden of proof is on you the same way the burden of proof is on anti-vaxers to prove that vaccines do harm; the null hypothesis is that routine ultrasound scanning is beneficial (financially or otherwise) if offered routinely, as evidenced by the document I linked from which the UK has designed its routine, low-risk antenatal screening policy which includes 12 and 20wk ultrasounds. You are putting forward the hypothesis that routine scans offer no benefit and are potentially harmful, so please find me good evidence that disproves the null hypothesis.
And I don't know why you're saying "most medical recommendations". That may be "most medical recommendations in the area that I live" because in the UK it is recommended that you have a 12 and 20wk ultrasound scan, and that comes from the midwives and obstetricians who base their evidence on the NICE Guidance, a body which searches for and peer-reviews and collates all the available published evidence on a given subject in order to determine if it is financially beneficial.
At the end of the day, I follow the money; they wouldn't spend it if they didn't think it was saving costs elsewhere.
Ultrasounds also give TONS of false positives that end of stressing women out. (E.g. oh, your baby might have a kidney problem that we wouldn't be able to address in utero anyway. Let's do more scans every few weeks just to monitor it. Oh, turns out it's nothing.) I've seen those sorts of scenarios happen far, far more often than situations where care would change as the result of a diagnosis (like the hyperbolic ones you're talking about). So I still think it's best to avoid routine ultrasounds without any medical indication. And where there is a medical indication, I TOTALLY support getting a scan, because that's where outcomes have been shown to be altered.
They're not hyperbolic, they are things that I have seen happen in real life. I am but one doctor who has only been working a relatively short time; talk to some of my colleagues and you'll hear a lot more of the same.
And I'm sorry, but your example makes no sense to me: if my unborn child has a potential kidney abnormality, I want to know about it whilst it's still in utero and a plan of action can be made to deal with it time-appropriately once it is born. Kidney's are kinda important.
Yes, this is stressful, and often fizzles out to mean nothing at all, but you're now ignoring the stress experienced by low-risk parents who have given birth to child with significant needs because they were told because they were low risk, their unborn baby would be.
I think you have your risk/benefit opinions, and I have mine, and I really don't think there's any benefit to discussing it further. I have seen a recently peer-reviewed literature that supports it and I agree with what it says, given my own knowledge of how ultrasound works and its use in the medical field.
You have your opinion based on outdated evidence, that you are unwilling to change just because the exact same study hasn't been repeated in 22yrs, and in the meantime, "we just don't know the long-term risks".
We don't know the long-term risks of many things that we do - does that mean we stop doing all of them even though many have been shown to have short-term benefits?
Your answer is yes, my answer is no.
There is no middle ground here.