External Cephalic Version Clinical Trial
Official title:
Intravenous Terbutaline Versus Intravenous Nitroglycerine for External Cephalic Version: A Double-Blinded Randomized Controlled Trial in Nulliparous Women
Breech presentation of a term pregnancy is a common occurrence. A procedure known as external cephalic version (ECV) is frequently used by obstetricians to turn the baby into the vertex position prior to delivery in order to avoid a cesarean section and the associated risks. Medications to relax the uterus, known as tocolytics, are used in conjunction with the procedure as they have been shown to improve the success rate of ECV, but with inconsistent, varying results.
Breech presentation occurs in approximately 3-4% of all births and all women with breech
presentation at term undergo cesarean delivery. The only way to avoid a cesarean is to
manually turn the baby prior to the date of delivery, a procedure known as elective external
cephalic version (ECV). ECV has been shown to reduce the frequency of breech presentation at
term and thus lessen the risks associated with breech delivery and those of cesarean
section, with little risk to the mother or baby. Tocolysis, administered immediately prior
to the ECV and commonly used at The Mount Sinai Hospital, has been shown to improve the
success rate of ECV. Several different agents are known to cause tocolysis. These include
beta-mimetics (ritodrine, terbutaline), nitroglycerine (NTGL) and nifedipine.Terbutaline has
been shown to improve success rate of ECV. Another study published in 2004 by El-Sayed et al
showed that subcutaneous terbutaline was associated with higher rates of successful ECV than
IV NTGL in term patients. There is inconsistent data in regard to the success rate of ECV
with NTGL. In a study published in 2003 by Bujold et al, NTGL was associated with a higher
rate of side effects and a lower rate of successful ECV when compared to ritodrine. Another
study published in 2009 by Hilton et al showed that NTGL was more efficacious for ECV in
nulliparous versus multiparous women. Yet another study published in 2009 by Yanny et al
showed no differences between sublingual NTGL versus placebo in efficacy, and reported no
significant side effects. A study published in 2003 by Bujold et al showed that sublingual
NTGL was associated with a higher incidence of headache and did not improve the success rate
of ECV. It may be beneficial to use NTGL instead of terbutaline because NTGL is a shorter
acting agent and the procedure itself only lasts 10-15 minutes. Additionally, both
medications have side effects. Terbutaline is associated with maternal tachycardia,
hyperglycemia, hypokalemia, pulmonary edema, cardiac arrhythmias, hypertension and
myocardial ischemia, and NTGL is associated with maternal nausea, vomiting, headache, and
hypotension. For both medications the side effects are self- limiting but depending on the
patient's co-morbidities one drug may be beneficial for that individual patient.
To date no study has compared the efficacy of intravenous terbutaline versus intravenous
NTGL in women presenting for ECV. The purpose of this study is to determine if the success
rate of ECV can be improved with the use of IV NTGL.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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