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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether retention of cervical cerclage after PPROM improves latency (without a significant increase in chorioamnionitis) and lessens neonatal morbidity.


Clinical Trial Description

The placement of cervical cerclage is standard of care for women who experience incompetent cervix. Treadwell et al, published the largest retrospective review of 482 patients receiving cerclage (364 elective and 118 emergent). They found premature rupture of membranes (PROM) in 38% of the subjects with 9% delivering <27 weeks. Preterm birth is the cause of at least 75% of neonatal deaths that are not due to congenital malformations. The question of whether to remove cerclage after preterm premature rupture of membranes (PPROM) is one of the unresolved controversies in obstetrics because the few available studies are retrospective, all have small numbers of patients, and the studies have given conflicting results regarding the safety of retaining a cerclage after preterm premature rupture of the membranes. It is unclear from the retrospective studies whether latency (the interval from membrane rupture to the onset of labor) is prolonged with retention of the suture. Furthermore, some, but not all studies suggest an increase in major infectious maternal morbidity and possibly neonatal morbidity. For this reason, clinicians vary greatly in deciding on whether to remove a cerclage in a patient with PPROM and either practice is currently an acceptable standard. This is a fairly rare complication, the combination of PPROM in a patient with cerclage in place only occurs in about 1-3/1000 pregnant women. Thus it has been impossible to study this problem prospectively in any single institution. The establishment of the Obstetrix Collaborative Research Group affords the unique opportunity to study this rare complication. Obstetrix manages 19 practices of Perinatologists around the U.S. and Mexico and is comprised of nearly 100 such subspecialists. This problem is most often referred to a Perinatologist when it occurs, so it is not unusual for these practices to see 5 - 10 such patients per year. Obstetrix fully funds the infrastructure of this research group and inclusion in this study will not alter the cost of patient care in either group as there is virtually no cost in removing the cerclage and all these patients are kept in hospital until delivery when membranes rupture as standard of care.

This is a multicenter trial. The purpose is to determine whether retention of cerclage after preterm premature rupture of the membranes improves latency (without a significant increase in chorioamnionitis) and lessens neonatal morbidity. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00201656
Study type Interventional
Source Mednax Center for Research, Education and Quality
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase Phase 4
Start date November 2004
Completion date April 2014

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
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Not yet recruiting NCT06262308 - Emotional Support for Women Experiencing PPROM N/A
Recruiting NCT02380560 - Myometrial Thickness as a Predictor for the Latency Interval in PPROM N/A
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Recruiting NCT02997345 - PPROM Registry (Preterm Premature Rupture of Membranes)
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Terminated NCT00290199 - Foley Catheter for Labor Induction in Women With Term and Near Term Membrane Rupture N/A
Recruiting NCT02369601 - PROMComplete for Determination of Rupture of Fetal Membranes
Terminated NCT00890630 - Intracervical Catheters for Induction of Labour in Women With Prelabour Rupture of Membranes at Term Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT01063686 - The Cervical Cap in the Diagnosis of Rupture of Membranes in the Second Trimester N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT00432588 - Comparing the Effect of Vaginal Misoprostol With Dinoprostone in Term Pregnancies Phase 1/Phase 2