The aim of the study is to determine the effect of cerclage pessary on the incidence of spontaneous delivery between randomization (at 20-24+6 weeks) and 33+6 weeks in asymptomatic women with singleton pregnancies found at routine mid-trimester screening to have a cervix of \<25 mm in length and in twin pregnancies.
Prematurity is responsible for more than half of all neonatal deaths and whilst advances in neonatal care have dramatically improved survival of extremely premature infants, there remains a significant risk of handicap and disability in survivors and an associated social and economic burden. In singleton pregnancies the rate of spontaneous premature birth before 34 weeks is about 1% and the risk of spontaneous early delivery is inversely related to cervical length. The group with cervix of 1-15 mm accounted for 28% of all spontaneous deliveries before 34 weeks and those with cervix of 16-25 mm accounted for 21%. The rate of spontaneous premature birth before 34 weeks is about 13% in twin pregnancies. Potential methods for the prevention of preterm delivery include bed rest, cervical cerclage and prophylactic administration of progesterone. The prophylactic administration of progesterone beginning in mid-gestation to women who previously had a premature birth and in those with a short cervix has been shown to reduce the rate of spontaneous preterm birth before 34 weeks. On the other hand, randomized studies reported that, in twin pregnancies, bed rest was associated with a significant increase, rather than decrease, in the rate of early preterm delivery. There is some evidence that the rate of premature birth can be dramatically reduced by the insertion of a vaginal pessary (cerclage pessary, CE0482, MED/CERT ISO 9003 / EN 46003). This will be a multicenter trial in the UK and other countries. During routine ultrasound scan at 20-24 weeks of gestation for examination of fetal anatomy and growth, all women with twin pregnancy or with singleton pregnancy found to have a cervix of \<25 mm in length and where the fetuses are found to be alive with no major abnormalities, severe twin to twin transfusion syndrome or severe fetal growth restriction in one of the fetuses (in the case of twin pregnancy), will be invited to participate in a randomized trial of standard management vs vaginal insertion of a cerclage pessary. For singleton pregnancy, in both arms the patients with cervical length \<15 mm will be given prophylactic progesterone (200 mg vaginal capsule per night up to 34 weeks). Randomization and insertion of the pessary (in those allocated to this group) will be carried out within 5 days after the 20-24 weeks scan. The pessary will be removed by a simple vaginal examination at 37 weeks or earlier before medically indicated preterm induction of labor or elective cesarean section. The pessary will also be removed in women in preterm labor not responding to tocolytic therapy. In monochorionic twins some obstetricians advise that delivery is carried out at around 36 weeks.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
2,109
Inserted from randomization till 36-37 weeks of gestation
Medical University of Vienna-department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Vienna, Austria
The primary outcome measure will be spontaneous delivery from randomization to 33 weeks and 6 days (237 days) of gestation.
Time frame: 10 weeks
Low birth weight; Fetal or neonatal death; Major adverse outcomes (IVH, RDS, retinopathy of prematurity or necrotizing enterocolitis); Need for neonatal special care (ventilation, phototherapy, treatment for sepsis, blood transfusion)
Time frame: Within the first year
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