This is a feasibility study with historical control designed to evaluate whether delivery of the placenta prior to umbilical cord clamping at caesarean sections is a feasible, safe and acceptable way of facilitating intact-cord stabilisation of preterm and term newborn infants.
Standard procedure when an infant is delivered by caesarean section is to wait to clamp the umbilical cord for approximately one minute, and then transfer the infant to a designated area for assessment and stabilisation. If the infant needs immediate resuscitation, the umbilical cord is cut earlier to expedite transfer to resuscitation equipment and qualified care (including stimulation, clearing airways and respiratory support). It has been suggested in several pilot and clinical studies that keeping the umbilical cord intact during the infant's transition from intra- to extrauterine life may improve outcomes and survival, especially for preterm infants. Since length of the umbilical cord is limited, finding ways to avoid cutting the cord while initiating stabilisation and care is warranted. To date, most studies have reported on interventions that involve mobile resuscitation equipment; thus keeping the infant in close proximity to the mother. This may be extra challenging in caesareans sections, especially due to space constraints and maintenance of sterility. The objective of this study to determine whether extra-uterine placental transfusion to facilitate intact-cord stabilisation and physiology-based cord clamping for infants delivered by caesarean section is feasible, safe and acceptable for infants and their mothers, as well as for involved personnel.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
263
Placenta is delivered prior to umbilical cord clamping to facilitate placental transfusion. Infant and placenta are transferred to a warmer in an adjacent room, the umbilical cord is clamped and cut when the cord is white, pulsations have ceased and the infants is breathing regularly (within 10 minutes after delivery)
Placenta is delivered prior to umbilical cord clamping to facilitate placental transfusion. Infant and placenta are transferred to a warmer in an adjacent room and necessary respiratory support is initiated (CPAP or PPV) by a neonatal team. The umbilical cord is clamped and cut when the cord is white, pulsations have ceased and the infant is breathing regularly with or without support (at maximum 10 minutes after delivery)
Møre and Romsdal Hospital Trust
Ålesund, Møre and Romsdal, Norway
Intervention fidelity (cohort 1)
Extra-uterine placental transfusion + physiology-based cord clamping applied (for vigorous infants), measured as proportion of completed checklists. Registered by staff, using checklists in the operating room.
Time frame: First 10 minutes after delivery
Intervention fidelity (cohort 2)
Extra-uterine placental transfusion + intact-cord stabilisation + physiology-based cord clamping applied (for infants needing any respiratory support), measured as proportion of completed checklists. Registered by staff, using checklists in the operating room.
Time frame: First 10 minutes after delivery
Dry-electrode ECG attached (cohort 1+2)
Time from birth to dry-electrode ECG (NeoBeat) is attached to the infant's chest or abdomen (measured in seconds). Registered on a checklist by a time-keeper in the operating room.
Time frame: Within 10 seconds after birth
First cry or breathing effort (cohort 1+2)
Time from birth to infant's first cry or attempt of spontaneous breathing (measured in minutes and seconds). Assessed by attending midwife or pediatric registrar. Registered on a checklist by a time-keeper in the operating room.
Time frame: Within 10 minutes after birth
Heart rate (cohort 1+2)
Infant's heart rate after birth measured by a dry-electrode ECG (NeoBeat). Registered on a special data collection sheet by a timekeeper or attending midwife. Data are transferred wirelessly from the NeoBeat device to the Liveborn App (installed on a designated tablet) for storage and further analysis.
Time frame: First 10 -15 minutes after birth
Umbilical cord blood samples (cohort 1+2)
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Umbilical cord is clamped and cut minimum 60 seconds after delivery to facilitate placental transfusion. Placenta is delivered after cord clamping. Infants needing respiratory support or other stabilisation are transferred to a warmer in the adjacent room where a neonatal team is waiting.
Time from birth to sampling for umbilical cord blood gas analysis (arterial and venous) completed (measured in seconds). Registered on a checklist by a time-keeper in the operating room.
Time frame: Within 40-60 seconds after birth
Apgar score (cohort 1+2)
Composite of heart rate, breathing effort, skin colour, muscle tone and reflexes (each sub scale 0 (absent), 1, 2 (normal). Minimum 0, maximum 10. Assessed by the attending midwife or pediatric registrar, registered on a special data collection sheet by a timekeeper in the operating room
Time frame: At 1 minute after birth
Delivery of placenta (cohort 1+2)
Time from birth to delivery of the placenta (measured in minutes ans seconds), registered on checklist by a time-keeper in the operating room
Time frame: At 1 minute (+/- 10 seconds) after birth
Respiratory support (cohort 2)
Type of respiratory support applied. Alternatives are: CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure) or PPV (Positive Pressure Ventilation) Registered on a special data collection sheet by the attending neonatal team or midwife
Time frame: First 10-15 minutes after birth
Duration of respiratory support (cohort 2)
Duration of respiratory support (CPAP or PPV), measured in minutes and seconds. Registered on a special data collection sheet by the attending neonatal team or midwife
Time frame: First 10-15 minutes after birth
Apgar score
Composite of heart rate, breathing effort, skin colour, muscle tone and reflexes (each sub scale 0 (absent), 1, 2 (normal). Minimum 0, maximum 10. Assessed and registered on a special data collection sheet by the attending midwife or neonatal nurse
Time frame: At 5 minutes after birth (cohort 1+2)
Stabilisation (cohort 2)
Time from birth to stabilisation achieved (regular breathing, heartrate (HR) \>100, Saturation (SpO2) \>85%, inspired oxygen fraction (FiO2) \<40%. Measured in minutes and seconds. Assessed and registered on a special data collection sheet by the attending midwife or neonatal nurse
Time frame: Within 10-20 minutes after birth
Cord clamping time (cohort 1+2)
Time from birth to umbilical cord clamping (measured in minutes and seconds), registered on a special data collection sheet by the attending midwife
Time frame: Within 10 minutes after birth
Apgar score (cohort 1+2)
Composite of heart rate, breathing effort, skin colour, muscle tone and reflexes (each sub scale 0 (absent), 1, 2 (normal). Minimum 0, maximum 10. Assessed and registered on a special data collection sheet by the attending midwife or neonatal nurse
Time frame: At 10 minutes after birth
Skin-to-skin-contact (cohort 1+2)
Time from birth to continuous skin-to-skin contact between infant and mother (or other parent), measured in minutes. Registered on a checklist by the attending midwife or neonatal nurse
Time frame: Within 2 hours after birth
Residual placenta volume (cohort 1+2)
Drained and weighed residual blood volume from placenta and umbilical cord after cord clamping (measured in grams, converted to milliliters by a ratio of 1.05:1). Registered by the attending midwife or assistant nurse
Time frame: Within 10-15 minutes after birth