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PROBLEM-BASED LEARNING IN OBSTETRICS Management of women with a previous preterm birth Although the survival of preterm infants has improved over the last 20 years, the rate of long-term disability has not. Little advance has been made in the prevention and treatment of PTB. Indeed, the rate of PTB is increasing, and consequently the prevalence of long-term disability attributed to PTB is also increasing. The challenge of managing PTB at an individual or community level is that of reducing the proportion of mothers who deliver before 32 weeks. It is in this context that two case scenarios are discussed, highlighting the management principles that should inform care. Dilly OC Anumba Abstract Preterm birth (PTB) is the principal cause of perinatal morbidity and mortality of non-anomalous fetuses. It poses major health economic burdens on families and society. Extreme PTB is associated with a high risk of long-term ill-health and disability. Although advances in neonatal care and use of antenatal corticosteroids have improved the survival of preterm babies over the last two decades, the incidence of PTB and its long-term sequelae remain relatively unchanged. Recent strategies for identifying women at risk of PTB include ultrasound assessment of the cervix and the detection of fetal fibronectin on genital swabbing. Progestogen therapy in women at risk may prolong gestation and improve neonatal outcomes, but the optimal regimen and the women most suitable for this therapy remain to be clarified. Further work is required to identify screening methods with high positive predictive values, and to formulate effective therapies that substantially prolong gestation and minimise the proportion of extremely premature births. Case 1: idiopathic spontaneous preterm birth A 21-year-old woman in her third pregnancy presents to the antenatal clinic for booking at 13 weeks’ gestation. She has had two previous preterm deliveries, the first at 25 weeks’ gestation culminating in early neonatal death and the second at 27 weeks. The latter baby survived and has developmental delay at 3 years of age. She is concerned that she will deliver prematurely and that the baby may have problems if it survives. She hopes that you can do something to minimise this risk. How would you manage her pregnancy? This case illustrates the typical presentation of women at risk of PTB and the management dilemmas associated with previous PTB. Provision of appropriate counselling and a strategy for care is predicated on a working understanding of the epidemiological issues, and the existing evidence base, pertaining to the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of preterm labour. Up to 75% of PTBs are spontaneous, while the rest arise from medical indications. Spontaneous PTB occurs when the process of labour begins in the absence of any obvious maternal or fetal illness. It may result from spontaneous labour, incompetent cervix, premature rupture of membranes (PROM) or intrauterine infection. Approximately one-half of spontaneous PTBs have no associated identifiable risk factors; the other half are associated with risk factors such as multiple gestation, a history of previous PTB, second-trimester bleeding, genitourinary tract infections, cigarette smoking, low body mass index and age below 18 years. It is prudent to elicit these associations in any woman booking for antenatal care. This case demonstrates risk factors for PTB such as teenage pregnancy (the first birth at 25 weeks’ gestation was in the earlier teenage years) and two previous PTBs (associated with a 25–30% risk of recurrence). A clear history of the sequence of events preceding each of the two previous births may shed light on potential aetiological associations with recurrent PTB: continuing substance misuse, cigarette smoking, genitourinary infection, PROM, or previous cervical surgery or uterine malformation. Such information could prove useful in outlining a care plan. Previous cold-knife cervical biopsy, particularly if repeated, may lower the threshold for considering elective cervical cerclage. PTB associated with infection may require genitourinary infection screening at the booking visit, and throughout pregnancy. There is a strong association between genital tract infection and preterm labour, and it is often impossible to determine whether chorioamnionitis is the cause or the consequence of PTB. However, a careful evaluation of the history may clarify the sequence of events. Previous PTB is associated with a sixfold Keywords preterm birth; pregnancy; labour Introduction A fetus is preterm when it is born before 37 completed weeks of gestation. Most morbidity and mortality occurs in infants born before 32 weeks’ gestational age with birth weight below 1500 g. The consequences of such premature delivery are most severe when birth occurs at the borders of fetal viability, between 23 and 28 weeks’ gestation. The socioeconomic burden of preterm birth (PTB) includes the high cost of neonatal intensive care and the long-term care of disabled survivors. Worldwide data on the incidence of PTB are unreliable, but the incidence ranges between 5% in developed countries and 25% in developing countries. Higher PTB rates are recorded among blacks and women at the extremes of reproductive age. The principal aetiological associations include infection, iatrogenic delivery (mainly due to hypertension and pre-eclampsia), multiple pregnancy, intrauterine growth restriction, substance dependence and maternal stress. Dilly OC Anumba FWACS MRCOG MD LLM(Medical Law) is at the Section of Endocrinology and Reproduction, Academic Unit of Reproductive and Developmental Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK and Senior Clinical Lecturer/Consultant in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Subspecialist in Fetomaternal Medicine, Section of Endocrinology and Reproduction, Academic Unit of Reproductive and Developmental Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK. OBSTETRICS, GYNAECOLOGY AND REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE ]:] 1 r 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. PROBLEM-BASED LEARNING IN OBSTETRICS increased risk of PROM and a 20-fold increased risk of PTB without PROM. Medically indicated premature delivery is often the result of disorders such as pre-eclampsia, fetal growth restriction, placenta praevia and a history of stillbirth. If either of the previous births was artificially induced for any of these indications, the risk of recurrence would depend on the persistence of the underlying medical condition. Evaluation for these disorders early in the antenatal period should ensure that appropriate care plans are put in place. A strong positive history of PTB as illustrated by this case is associated with a high recurrence risk. One study has suggested that a history of two consecutive PTBs is associated with a recurrence risk of 25–30% (relative risk 6.5) compared with 2.6% in a woman who has had two previous term deliveries (relative risk 0.6) and no history of PTB. A history of one PTB is associated with a 10–17% risk of recurrence (relative risk 3.9). A woman considered to be at high risk of recurrent PTB requires closer surveillance during pregnancy and consideration of interventions that may reduce the risk or the impact of PTB on the health of the child. However, there is no consensus on how those at risk should be managed during a future pregnancy. the cervical internal os. A cervical length of 25 mm or less (below the 10th percentile) measured at 24 weeks’ gestation is associated more strongly with preterm labour than digital examination. To predict PTB before 35 weeks’ gestation, a cervical length of 25 mm of less is associated with a sensitivity of 47% and a positive predictive value of 37%. At all cervical lengths, the risk of PTB increases as the cervical length declines. The low sensitivity of cervical length relates to the low prevalence of PTB in low-risk populations. In a high-risk cohort of women with a prevalence of PTB of more than 30%, the sensitivity of cervical length monitoring is 79%, compared with 19–39% in a low-risk population with a prevalence of PTB of less than 4%. In most studies, however, in both low- and high-risk women cervical length is associated with a high negative predictive value. Thus, this assessment helps to avoid unnecessary tocolysis, reduces hospitalisation time, and may facilitate more accurate selection of women who require corticosteroid treatment for fetal lung maturation. There is no consensus regarding which women are at sufficient risk of PTB to be suitable for cervical length monitoring. Based on recurrence risks, most practitioners would agree on the appropriateness of cervical monitoring in a woman with a history of two previous PTBs. The lower predictive value of this screening tool as the risk of PTB declines would make such monitoring cost-ineffective in women with a history of only one previous PTB, particularly at later gestations. An algorithm for cervical monitoring is shown in Figure 1. Several variations of this model exist, but further evidence is required to determine who to scan, when to scan, how frequently to scan, and when to discontinue scanning as pregnancy progresses. Qualitative determination of FFN in cervicovaginal secretions has found worldwide appeal for screening for the risk of PTB. FFN is an extracellular matrix protein that acts as an adhesive between the fetal membranes and the decidua. It is commonly found in cervical secretions in the first half of pregnancy, and its presence after 20 weeks’ gestation is thought to represent disruption of the maternal–fetal interface. When FFN is found in cervical secretions between 24 and 30 weeks’ gestation, the sensitivity for predicting delivery before 35 weeks’ gestation is low (o30%), as is the positive predictive value. In contrast, the negative predictive value for delivery within 2 weeks of the test is more than 90%. FFN determination is useful in the screening of serially monitored, asymptomatic, high-risk women. A negative FFN test identifies patients at low risk of PTB, but a positive test has limited predictive value. Simultaneous use of cervical length assessment and FFN determination improves the overall prediction of PTB. In one study, cervical length less than 25 mm and a positive FFN test are associated with a risk of delivery before 35 weeks of more than 60%, compared with a risk of 25% with cervical length less than 25 mm and negative FFN. Another study showed that, when the FFN test is positive at 23 weeks, the risk of delivery before 33 weeks’ gestation is 75% if the cervical length is 15 mm or less, compared with 3% if it is more than 15 mm.The same study showed that when FFN is negative, the risk of PTB before 33 weeks is 11% if the cervical length is 15 mm or less, compared with 0.5% if it is more than 15 mm. Data of this kind are increasingly incorporated into simple management decision trees for women attending PTB clinics. Ultimately, whether to use The evidence base for several screening tools used to predict PTB is weak. Although a woman may have been identified to be at increased risk of PTB, effective prevention is often unproven. Many women who will not have PTB undergo screening and treatment in an attempt to defer labour in the few women who will. In the given clinical scenario, in which the risk of repeat PTB is high, careful monitoring in a designated specialist clinic will be helpful. Regardless of whether there was associated infection in either of her previous pregnancies, screening for genitourinary infection at booking and throughout pregnancy is advisable. Since the infections associated with PTB are unclear, which organisms warrant treatment remains controversial. There is some agreement that organisms that cause bacterial vaginosis, and sexually transmitted infections such as chlamydia, should be treated promptly. Further swabs should confirm clinical cure after appropriate antibiotic therapy has been completed. Although the role of group B haemolytic streptococcal infection in the genesis of PTB remains unclear, women who screen positive during pregnancy should receive antibiotics intra-partum to reduce the risk of neonatal infection. Screening by ultrasonography and fetal fibronectin There is an emerging consensus that cervical ultrasonography and qualitative determination of fetal fibronectin (FFN) in cervicovaginal secretions are valuable screening methods for idiopathic spontaneous PTB in women considered to be at high risk. In contrast, and despite extensive clinical trials, monitoring of uterine activity is not of value in the prediction of preterm labour. Assessment of the cervix by transvaginal ultrasonography is increasingly used in women at risk of preterm labour and PTB. Indices that correlate with risk of PTB include cervical length, presence of a funnel, funnel width or length and the diameter of OBSTETRICS, GYNAECOLOGY AND REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE ]:] 2 r 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. PROBLEM-BASED LEARNING IN OBSTETRICS in the treatment of the twin transfusion syndromes. Earlier commencement of screening (e.g. from 14 weeks) may have to be considered when cervical weakness is a potential cause of very early premature delivery. Such earlier screening may enable one to select patients who would be suitable for cervical cerclage. In the final analysis, it would seem best to base the decision on the duration of monitoring on individual clinical presentations and findings. Further research is required to improve the evidence base for such decisions. Case 2: diagnosis of preterm birth A 35-year-old woman in her second pregnancy presents to the triage area of her local delivery suite at 26 weeks’ gestation with a history of ‘tightenings’ occurring once every 10 minutes. Her first pregnancy culminated in PTB at 27 weeks and she is anxious that she may deliver prematurely again. There are no neonatal intensive care cots in the local hospital, though a cot has been identified in a unit 100 miles away. Decisions need to be made regarding a care plan in the best interests of the mother and her baby, and taking into account the availability of health-care resources. How would you manage her pregnancy? This clinical scenario is not uncommon in the UK, and indeed in other developed economies. It highlights the pitfalls that attend the clinical diagnosis of preterm labour and the apparent limitations in the availability of neonatal intensive care resources for those at risk of (usually unexpected) PTB. To deal with this problem, the obstetrician, in cooperation with the neonatal team, needs to adopt an approach that more accurately identifies women who are likely to deliver prematurely, while avoiding unnecessary and often expensive care and treatments for women who ultimately do not deliver prematurely. Achieving this goal is hampered by the notorious inaccuracy of the clinical diagnosis of preterm labour based on the traditional methods of uterine activity monitoring and digital assessment of the cervix. In one study that evaluated the clinical diagnostic criteria of preterm labour, 40% of patients who were diagnosed as being in preterm labour but were treated with placebo delivered at term, reflecting a high false-positive rate. In another study, 18% of women not thought to be in preterm labour by traditional clinical criteria delivered prematurely, reflecting the high false-negative rate of clinical assessment. Too many women receive unnecessary treatment to prevent cervical dilation beyond 3 cm, when clinical assessment becomes more accurate. Accurate diagnosis also impacts on the results of clinical studies, because treatment of women who are not in labour may be erroneously considered successful. In symptomatic women such as this case, the best signs of true labour include cervical dilation greater than 2 cm, a short cervix, and demonstration of a change in cervical dilation of 2 cm or more over a short time frame. Diagnosis before the cervix reaches 3 cm is more reliably made by cervical ultrasonography than by digital assessment. In the setting of early preterm labour, the cervical canal has a Y-shaped appearance that is more likely to indicate pressure on the lower uterine segment as a result of true labour than the flat, ‘T’ configuration of the non-labouring cervix. FFN assessment is a powerful adjunct as a screening tool in this clinical scenario. In women such as this case, with symptoms of preterm labour before advanced cervical dilation, a recent Figure 1 Antenatal management of a pregnant woman at risk of preterm birth. fFN, fetal fibronectin. cervical scanning simultaneously with FFN assessment depends on local manpower and funding resources. The author’s practice is to use cervical ultrasonography as the primary tool for antenatal screening; FFN assessment is incorporated when the cervical parameters become borderline or ‘abnormal’, or demonstrate more rapid change than is considered normal, or when key decisions must be made regarding the interval between clinic visits, the need for hospitalisation or the administration of corticosteroids. There is little clinical evidence on how long to screen women at risk for PTB by cervical ultrasonography and FFN assessment. Broadly, antenatal screening is best started shortly after 20 weeks, and most practitioners would discontinue it by 32 weeks. However, there are certain clinical situations in fetal care when such screening tools may inform management decisions, including the management of multiple gestation, polyhydramnios, and as an adjunct to fetal invasive procedures such as amnio-drainage OBSTETRICS, GYNAECOLOGY AND REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE ]:] 3 r 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. PROBLEM-BASED LEARNING IN OBSTETRICS meta-analysis of trials of FFN summarised that the test is probably most accurate in predicting spontaneous PTB within 7–10 days of testing. Thus, FFN determination enables clinicians to avoid over-diagnosis and unnecessary treatment of preterm labour. The test also improves the sensitivity of diagnosis of preterm labour by identifying women who may benefit from further observation or treatment. There are now several reports suggesting that use of the FFN test in scenarios similar to Case 2 may be cost-beneficial by enabling savings on hospital admissions and therapy. Cervical length over 30 mm on ultrasonography coupled with a negative FFN test suggest that true preterm labour is highly unlikely within 2 weeks. Consideration may therefore be given to deferring tocolysis and avoiding expensive and often unnecessary transfer to distant hospitals because of shortages in neonatal facilities. When uterine activity is not established, discharge from hospital to outpatient follow-up may be appropriate. Conversely, a short or dilated cervix on ultrasonography and/or a positive FFN test may indicate hospitalisation, tocolysis, corticosteroid therapy or transfer. An important caveat is the need for a strategy to review the above findings, as dictated by changes in the mother’s clinical situation. For other factors that may be relevant to the management of confirmed or suspected preterm labour, the reader is referred to the Further Reading. Treatments that are often indicated in the setting of a high risk of early PTB include corticosteroids, antibiotic therapy and tocolysis. assessing the value of maternal antibiotic therapy in preventing preterm labour or PTB. The ORACLE study, evaluated with other, smaller trials, led to the conclusion that antibiotic use did not improve fetal outcome but may have caused a trend towards increased death rates in the infants of treated women. Maternal administration of progestogen has now been shown in several randomised trials to prevent PTB in women with a previous idiopathic preterm labour or PROM. Weekly injections of 17ahydroxyprogesterone caproate, starting at 16–20 weeks’ gestation, significantly reduced delivery at less than 37, less than 35 and less than 32 weeks’ gestation and led to improved neonatal outcomes. Similar observations have been made with vaginally administered progestogen. The dose, route and regimen of administration of progestogen in this setting remain to be determined, and the place of progestogen therapy in the management of multiple pregnancy, positive FFN swabs, cervical cerclage and a short cervix remains to be clarified. Prophylactic cerclage for a short cervix as a means of preventing PTB remains unclear. Bed rest and hydration do not appear to improve the rate ~ of PTB. FURTHER READING Ekwo E E, Gosselink C A, Moawad A. Unfavorable outcome in penultimate pregnancy and premature rupture of membranes in successive pregnancy. Obstet Gynecol 1992; 80: 166–72. Heath V C, Daskalakis G, Zagaliki A, Carvalho M, Nicolaides K H. Cervicovaginal fibronectin and cervical length at 23 weeks of gestation: relative risk of early preterm delivery. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 2000; 107: 1276–81. Iams J D, Goldenberg R L, Mercer B M et al. The preterm prediction study: recurrence risks of spontaneous preterm birth. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1998; 178: 1035–40. Joffe G M, Jacques D, Bemis-Heys R, Burton R, Skram B, Shelburne P. Impact of the fetal fibronectin assay on admissions for preterm labor. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1999; 180: 581–6. Kenyon S L, Taylor D J, Tarnow-Mordi W. Broad spectrum antibiotics for spontaneous preterm labor: the ORACLE II randomized trial. ORACLE Collaborative Group. Lancet 2001; 357: 989–94. King J F, Grant A, Keirse M J, Chalmers I. Beta-mimetics in preterm labour: an overview of the randomized controlled trials. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1988; 95: 211–22. Liggins G C, Howie R N. A controlled trial of antepartum corticosteroid treatment for prevention of the respiratory distress syndrome in premature infants. Pediatrics 1972; 50: 515–25. Meis P J, Klebanoff M, Thom E et al. Prevention of recurrent preterm labor by 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone caproate. N Engl J Med 2003; 348: 2379–85. Resnik R. Issues in the management of preterm labor. J Obstet Gynaecol Res 2005; 31: 354–8. Prevention of preterm birth Of the many agents used to inhibit preterm labour in the acute setting, the b-adrenergic receptor agonists atosiban and indomethacin have been shown to be effective in prolonging pregnancy in large, randomised trials. Most clinical trials have shown that the tocolytic drugs might prevent delivery for 2–7 days, which is enough time for the use of corticosteroids to induce lung maturation. Neither maintenance treatment with tocolytic drugs nor repeated acute tocolysis improves perinatal outcome. Since the early reports of a controlled trial by Liggins and Howie in 1972, several studies have confirmed the beneficial effects of corticosteroids in reducing the incidence and severity of surfactant-deficient respiratory distress syndrome, improving the survival rates of infants born at 24–34 weeks’ gestation and decreasing CNS and gastrointestinal complications. Betamethasone or dexamethasone is administered in two doses of 12 mg, 24 hours apart. Repeat doses of corticosteroids weekly or every other week do not appear to improve composite outcome in terms of respiratory distress syndrome, survival, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, necrotising enterocolitis and periventricular leukomalacia. Potential harmful effects of such repeated therapy (risk of infection and impaired fetal brain development) preclude the adoption of such a practice. The potential association of cervical and intrauterine infection with idiopathic spontaneous preterm labour has led to trials OBSTETRICS, GYNAECOLOGY AND REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE ]:] 4 r 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.