Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Maternal Body Mass Index and Anovaginal Distance in Active Phase of Labor at Term Pregnancy
The hypothesis was that the anovaginal distance (AVD), defined as the distance between the
anal mucosa and the vaginal wall at the middle level of the anal canal, is higher in obese
women compared with normal weight women. Measuring the AVD with transperineal ultrasound has
been shown to have a high interobserver agreement.
This study aimed to establish if there was a difference in AVD measured by transperineal
ultrasound between obese and normal weight women in active phase of labor at term pregnancy.
The second aim was to present normal values for the AVD in active phase of labor at term
pregnancy.
This is a prospective cohort study including primiparous women in active phase of labor at
term pregnancy on admission at the delivery ward at Linkoping University hospital. The study
period was between October 2014 and March 2016. Term pregnancy was defined as ≥ 37 - ≤ 42
gestational weeks. The women had to be in active labor according to the Swedish definition;
two out of three of the following criteria must be present: painful contractions (two to
three contractions in every ten minutes), cervix shortened and dilated > one centimeter (cm)
and/or rupture of membranes. The maximum cervix dilatation allowed for inclusion was seven
cm. Further the participant had to be proficient in the Swedish language and aged ≥18 years.
All participants were given written and verbal information of the study. The verbal consent
to participate was documented in the women´s medical record.
A total number of 207 women were included in the study. There was no information available
about whether the women declined participation or if they were not invited to participate.
333 women were excluded due to prematurity, cervix dilatation > seven cm when the women were
signed in at the delivery ward, younger than 18 years or not speaking satisfactory Swedish
language. After woman's informed consent, the AVD was measured with transperineal
ultrasound. The standardized method consisted of placing the vaginal probe at a right angle
to the posterior vaginal distal wall, and in a transversal scanning plane. All examinations
were done with the patient in the lithotomy position. The internal anal sphincter was
detected as a low-echogenic ring when the probe was moved cranially from the distal anal
canal to the mid anal canal. The AVD in this study was measured and defined as the distance
between the anal mucosa and the vaginal wall at the middle level of the anal canal. The
measured AVD, in millimeters (mm), was documented in the women´s medical record under a
specific keyword named "anovaginal distance".
The examiners had different proficiency in vaginal ultrasound. As a minimum training to be
allowed to include women in the study, the midwives and doctors were trained individually in
a defined education program. The education program was based on co-measuring the AVD with
one of two experienced experts of AVD-measurement ( ref metodartikeln) . All examiners had
to perform co-measurements in at least five women in term pregnancy. Each woman was, after
informed consent, measured three times by both the expert and the examiner at education.
These women were not included in the present study. The measured AVD values were not shared
by the expert and the examiner. The AVD values were compared afterwards, outside the
delivery room. In order to be given permission to independently measure the AVD, the
examiners had to perform similar values (+/- five mm) as the expert, in five women.
Proficiency was achieved among all examiners.
Information on measured AVD, maternal age, smoking status in early pregnancy, ethnicity,
measured maternal weight and maternal height in early pregnancy was extracted from the
digitalized medical records for every participant and manually registered in an anonymous
research database. Gestational weight gain was defined as the difference between the
registered weight in kilograms (kg) at the first antenatal visit to the antenatal care
center, and the registered weight in term pregnancy at the delivery ward. If there was no
registered weight at the delivery ward, the last registered weight at the antenatal care
center (between gestational week 37-42) was used to calculate gestational weight gain.
The study population was then divided into three Body Mass Index (BMI) classes based on
measured maternal weight and height in early pregnancy (gestational week 10-12); normal
weight (BMI <25) , overweight (BMI 25-29.9) and obese (BMI ≥30) . Maternal obesity (BMI ≥30)
was also subdivided into obesity class I (BMI 30-34.9) obesity class II (BMI 35-39.9) and
obesity class III (BMI ≥40) as suggested by WHO.
The number of women included was based on a power calculation where the relevant difference
in AVD between the BMI groups was set to be 10 mm and significance level were equals five
percent. A stipulation that a difference of five mm in the AVD could be of clinical
relevance was performed. The sample size in each BMI group was calculated to be at least 30
to reach a power of 80% to detect five mm difference in the AVD.
Statistical analyses were performed in order to compare background characteristics between
different BMI groups using One-way Anova for continuous variables and X2-test for
categorical variables. Post hoc tests were adjusted by the method of Tukey. A two-way Anova
was used in order to analyze BMI groups and measurer simultaneously. A p-value of <0.05 was
considered significant. Statistical analyses were performed using the Statistical Package
for the Social Sciences (IBM SPSS Statistics, Chicago, IL, USA; version 22)
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