Preterm Birth Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cervical Pessary to Prevent Preterm Singleton Birth in High Risk Population
DESIGN: Observational prospective study. INCLUSION CRITERIA: All women are 18 years old of
age or older with high risk for preterm birth, based on clinical history, and between 18.0
weeks and 23.6 weeks of pregnancy. SAMPLE SIZE: 214 asymptomatic high risk pregnant women.
METHODOLOGY: Patient selection, obtaining of informed consent, randomization for cervical
placement of pessary. Current follow-up until delivery. Pessary is removed at 37 week or
before in some specific situations.
MAIN OUTCOME: sPTB <370 weeks of gestation. SECONDARY OUTCOMES: Pregnancy outcomes and a
neonatal composite morbidity. EXPECTED RESULTS: Cervical pessary reduces sPB below 37 weeks
in high risk of preterm birth population.
Spontaneous preterm birth (sPB) is still a leading cause of neonatal and infant death and
responsible of neonatal morbidity as cerebral palsy. In spite of improvements of neonatal
care, rates of preterm birth have not changed in the recent 10 years.
Clinical risk factors for preterm birth include: 1) Demographic characteristics such a low
socioeconomic status, poor antenatal care, malnutrition or extremes in maternal age; 2)
Behavioral factors including smoking, illicit drug abuse, alcohol consumption or heavy
physical work; 3) Obstetric history including uterine malformation, previous preterm labor or
preterm rupture of membranes (PROM), previous cervical surgery, late miscarriage >16-17
weeks; 4) Aspects of the current pregnancy as multiple pregnancy, genital tract bleeding or
infection, Preterm Rupture of Membranes (PROM), short cervix and others.
In nulliparous women with no previous pregnancies or fetal losses >16 weeks, screening based
on clinical history (maternal racial origin, age, height, smoking status and method of
conception) could detect about 20% of sPB. In women with previous pregnancies at or beyond 16
weeks the detection rate is doubled by incorporating obstetric history.
The risks for women with a previous spontaneous preterm birth with a normal cervix in
pregnancy are not negligible. It has been suggested that there is a continuum risk dependent
on absolute cervical length while other authors showed that absolute length of cervix above
25mm had little impact on the risk of preterm birth before 35 weeks. A posterior study has
not identified any clinical or obstetric risk factors in high-risk women with cervical length
greater than 25mm that could help to identify those who will subsequently have a spontaneous
preterm birth.
The risk of preterm birth is inversely related to cervical length (CL) as measured by
ultrasound. Current options for the management of short cervix in singleton pregnancies are:
vaginal progesterone, with proved benefit; cervical cerclage in high risk and short cervix,
and cervical pessary.
Cervical pessary is a silicone ring with a smaller diameter to be fitted around the cervix
and a larger diameter to fix the device to the pelvic floor. It modifies the direction of the
cervix to the posterior vaginal wall.
Three randomized trials involving women with singleton low risk pregnancies and short cervix
provided controversial results regarding the effect of cervical pessary on the rate of sPB
before 34 weeks; in one trial, involving 380 women, the rate of this outcome was
significantly lower with a pessary than with no pessary (6% vs 27%); in another trial,
involving 108 women, there was no significant effect (9.4% vs 5.5%, respectively) and in the
largest trial, involving 935 women, no benefits were found (12.9% vs 11.3%, respectively).
Nowadays high-risk population with normal cervix is managed by cervical length surveillance
and physical activity restriction, as progesterone has not a proved benefit in women at risk
because of previous history but normal cervix.
Cervical pessary has not been tested specifically in high risk population. In PECEP study a
total number of 42 patients (11% of each group) had at least one previous preterm birth.
Authors did not report differences in the risk of preterm birth before 34 weeks in this
subgroup. In Nicolaides study, 154 patients had previous birth before 37 weeks: 70 were
treated with pessary and 84 with expectant management. The reported risk of birth before 34
weeks was 10.1% and 19.5%, respectively. In spite of the increased risk in expectant group,
these differences were not significant (OR 0.47 (0.18-1.21) p= 0.12). In both trials, women
included has short cervix.
Even that group of women with previous preterm birth were included in the previous trials,
pessary has not been proved in a specific group of population with previous history of
preterm birth or uterine-cervical factors. Therefore, there is a lack of information in this
topic.
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