Preterm Birth Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of History-indicated Early Treatment With Cervical Pessary Versus Expectant Management Treatment With Rescue Cerclage in Cases With Cervical Shortening in Singleton Pregnancies at High-risk for sPTB on Children's Long-term Outcome
Prevention of preterm birth (PTB) is a key factor for a positive short-term and long-term
outcome of the newborn children as mortality and morbidity are inversely related to
gestational age at delivery. Consequently every week of prolonged pregnancy will have a
tremendous effect concerning the outcome of the new-borns, subsequently for their parents and
society as well.
The proposed RCT aims to evaluate the impact of a preventive pessary treatment on the
prevention of preterm birth in women with a singleton pregnancy who are at high risk of
spontaneous preterm birth (sPTB) due to a history of at least one previous preterm delivery
and/or a history of previous cervical surgery. In accordance with the results by "van´t Hooft
et al. 2016" an approximately 20% higher percentage of children's long-term survival without
neurodevelopmental disability is expected for the pessary group in comparison with usual
management (=control group) on basis of a reduction of prematurity < 34 week of gestation
(WoG).
The primary outcome measure for the effect of the pessary treatment in comparison to
expectant management will be the children's long-term survival (3yrs) without
neurodevelopmental disability. Secondary endpoints assess the impact of a preventive pessary
placement on the prevention of preterm birth and its resulting risk on mortality and
morbidity for the neonates.
The "Prometheus Trial" is a prospective, multicentre, multinational, open-label, randomised,
controlled clinical trial in parallel groups.
Up to now the risk factor previous PTB has only been investigated in randomised controlled
trials (RCTs) for 17-hydroxyprogesterone caproate (17-OHPC) which is not available in most
european countries or in RCTs where the risk factor previous PTB was combined with the risk
factor cervical shortening.
Looking at the evidence of therapeutic effectiveness of vaginal progesterone these risk
factors should be addressed separately. Vaginal progesterone proved to be ineffective in the
prevention of recurrent PTB but effectively reduced PTB in women with a short cervix.
For cervical pessary therapy there is up to now only one cohort analysis for the combined
risk factors available proving the placement of a cervical pessary to be as effective as
cerclage or treatment with 200 mg vaginal progesterone in reducing preterm birth rate.
The risk factor 'history of at least one cold knife conisation' for PTB was up to now only
addressed in a pilot study investigating the effect of pessary treatment in asymptomatic
women with a singleton pregnancy along with a short sonographic cervix and it suggested a
beneficial effect on the prolongation of the pregnancy.
In approximately 1/3 of pregnancies leading to PTB cervical shortening develops. Here the
placement of a cervical pessary is a good therapeutic option. For this risk factor good
evidence is available for cervical pessary treatment in singleton and twin pregnancies. This
is the first RCT aiming to investigate the impact of a preventive cervical pessary therapy
for the prevention of recurrent PTB in women with a history of PTB and/or history of at least
one conisation.
Furthermore this RCT is a part of the first worldwide prospective metaanalysis in the
medicine Global Obstetrics Network "http://www.globalobstetricsnetwork.org/projects/". The
primary outcome "Children´s survival without neurodevelopmental disability at the age of 3
years" measures the long-time outcome of the intervention according to the CROWN criteria.
Cervical pessary treatment is a non-invasive, well-tolerated and cost-effective treatment
option which could be easily implemented in daily practice if it proves to have a preventive
effect of PTB. This especially applies for developing countries, where for example serial
cervix length measurements to detect cervical shortening are not feasible.
Statistics:
The primary statistical aim is to compare the primary combined outcome "long-term survival
without neuro-developmental disability at 3 years follow up" between the two treatment groups
with a two-sided chi-square test. In general, statistical comparisons will be two-sided and
use appropriate tests according to the scale of the outcome. A multivariate logistic
regression will be fitted to control for possible confounders. Relative risks and 95%
confidence interval as well as adjusted odds ratios will be calculated for the binary
outcomes. Statistical significance will be accepted in all cases with a p≤0.05.
The main statistical evaluation will be performed at two time points.
1. The complete data set for the secondary endpoints will be available after the last women
enrolled in this study has delivered her neonate, so the analysis of these outcome
parameter will be done right after this event.
2. The primary outcome will be evaluated 3 years after the last woman enrolled in this
study has delivered her neonate.
A descriptive analysis by preterm birth will be carried out calculating means and medians for
quantitative variables and proportions with 95% confidence intervals for categorical
variables.
Additionally an explorative subgroup analysis of the study collective will be performed
comparing the efficacy of the cervical pessary treatment in women with a normal cervical
length at 12 -16 weeks of gestation and in women who have developed a cervical shortening (<
25 mm) as an additional risk factor.
A drop out rate of up to 25% for the primary endpoint is expected due to the long follow-up
time (3 years) of the study; but it is not expected to have lost data for the secondary
endpoints because for these parameters the study has a short follow-up time till time to
birth only.
An interim analysis shall be conducted on key safety parameters after birth of 150 neonates:
the following safety endpoints will be assessed by a one-sided test with alpha=1%
- on level of the neonates: rate of preterm birth, time to birth, birth weight, death,
neonatal morbidity, harm of intervention
- and on the maternal level: rate of hospitalisation for threatened preterm labour < 32
weeks, rate of PRoM <32 weeks, rate of infection / inflammation, rate of physical or
psychological intolerance to pessary, rate of severe adverse reaction (SAR) / severe
adverse event (SAE), death.
The trial will be terminated as negative if a disadvantage for the pessary-treatment can be
found in one of these tests. To guarantee a high safety level the significance level is
chosen more conservatively than in a Bonferroni correction. All analysis will be carried out
with SPSS® version 19.0 or later ("IBM Company SPSS Inc." Headquarters, Chicago, Illinois.
USA) and R version 3.2.3 or later (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria).
Methods against bias:
- all women will be randomly allocated to the cervical pessary group or the control-group
in a 1:1 ratio. The randomization sequence is computer generated with variable block
sizes using a web-based electronic case report form (e-CRF) (Online-Software Castor is a
fully Good Clinical Practice compliant system) stratified for centers. The allocation
code will be disclosed after the patient´s initials will be confirmed. The investigators
or the trial coordinator will not have access to the randomization sequence.
- Exclusion criteria were chosen to ensure an equal risk distribution for pregnancy
complications and fetal morbidity / mortality rate for both study groups.
- The study is open label since masking the intervention is not possible. Investigator
training: All investigators should be trained in pessary application and cerclage
placement. Quality protocols should be submitted according to the "Clara-Angela
Foundation" -requirements for pessary placement.
Outcome assessors will be blinded to the interventions. Group allocations will base on an
intention to treat basis with a per protocol allocation as sensitivity analysis.
The study will be registered and the study protocol is available. Outcome measures meet the
core-outcome set for the evaluation of interventions to prevent PTB published by the
CROWN-initiative.
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