View clinical trials related to Cervical Insufficiency.
Filter by:Every year 15 million babies are born prematurely, which can lead to death or life-long disabilities. It is often caused by a dysfunction of the uterine cervix, which constitutes the narrow channel between the vagina and womb. During pregnancy, this channel must remain closed until the beginning of term labor. A weak cervix may not withstand the weight of the fetus, the amniotic fluid and the placenta and the cervical canal will open and cause late miscarriage or preterm delivery. To prevent this, a band (cerclage) can be applied around the cervix either vaginally or laparoscopically prior to a new pregnancy. To evaluate which treatment is best for most women, we will randomize (allocate by chance) women at risk for preterm birth, to either vaginal cerclage or laparoscopic cerclage in the Nordic countries and England
This study is planned prospectively in pregnancies who applied to Etlik Zübeyde Hanım Women's Health Care, Training and Research Hospital which is a teritiary hospital with 15.000 births anually, between January 2022 and January 2023. Cerclage treatment will be performed with the McDonald technique (the type of cerclage suture will be mersilene) between the 16-23 weeks of gestation in pregnant women with a diagnosis of cervical insufficiency based on the history , physical examination or ultrasound findings according to ACOG. The investigators will measure cerclage area after cerclage treatment (within 0-4 weeks) and different parameters besides it by transvaginal ultrasound. It will be whether the collected data is related to the incidence of preterm birth.
Pregnant women with short cervical length (<25 mm) in second-trimester ultrasonographic assessment are at high risk for preterm birth, a major cause of perinatal mortality and morbidity worldwide. Some of these short-cervix women proceed to a more advanced stage manifested as a painless prematurely dilated cervix in the second trimester. It is not fully understood why some women have short cervical length or prematurely dilated cervix (cervical insufficiency), although evidence is mounting that there is an association between short cervical length and infection by microorganisms. The investigators hypothesize that the cervical microorganisms in pregnant women with a shortened or dilated cervix are different, compared with those in women with normal cervical length and a closed cervix.