Vaginal progesterone is associated with a decrease in risk for early preterm birth and improved neonatal outcome in women with a short cervix: a secondary analysis from a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
E A DeFranco, J M O'Brien, C D Adair, D F Lewis, D R Hall, S Fusey, P Soma-Pillay, K Porter, H How, R Schakis, D Eller, Y Trivedi, G Vanburen, M Khandelwal, K Trofatter, D Vidyadhari, J Vijayaraghavan, J Weeks, B Dattel, E Newton, C Chazotte, G Valenzuela, P Calda, M Bsharat, G W Creasy, E A DeFranco, J M O'Brien, C D Adair, D F Lewis, D R Hall, S Fusey, P Soma-Pillay, K Porter, H How, R Schakis, D Eller, Y Trivedi, G Vanburen, M Khandelwal, K Trofatter, D Vidyadhari, J Vijayaraghavan, J Weeks, B Dattel, E Newton, C Chazotte, G Valenzuela, P Calda, M Bsharat, G W Creasy
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the efficacy of vaginal progesterone to prevent early preterm birth in women with sonographic evidence of a short cervical length in the midtrimester.
Methods: This was a planned, but modified, secondary analysis of our multinational, multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, in which women were randomized between 18 + 0 and 22 + 6 weeks of gestation to receive daily treatment with 90 mg of vaginal progesterone gel or placebo. Cervical length was measured with transvaginal ultrasound at enrollment and at 28 weeks of gestation. Treatment continued until either delivery, 37 weeks of gestation or development of preterm rupture of membranes. Maternal and neonatal outcomes were evaluated for the subset of all randomized women with cervical length < 28 mm at enrollment. The primary outcome was preterm birth at </= 32 weeks.
Results: A cervical length < 28 mm was identified in 46 randomized women: 19 of 313 who received progesterone and 27 of 307 who received the placebo. Baseline characteristics of the two groups were similar. In women with a cervical length < 28 mm, the rate of preterm birth at </= 32 weeks was significantly lower for those receiving progesterone than it was for those receiving the placebo (0% vs. 29.6%, P = 0.014). With progesterone, there were fewer admissions into the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU; 15.8% vs. 51.9%, P = 0.016) and shorter NICU stays (1.1 vs. 16.5 days, P = 0.013). There was also a trend toward a decreased rate of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (5.3% vs. 29.6%, P = 0.060).
Conclusion: Vaginal progesterone may reduce the rate of early preterm birth and improve neonatal outcome in women with a short sonographic cervical length.
Copyright (c) 2007 ISUOG
Source: PubMed
Próximos ensayos clínicos
-
NCT07655505Aún no reclutando
-
NCT07655518Aún no reclutando
-
NCT07655531Aún no reclutandoSpinal Cord Disorders
-
NCT07655544Aún no reclutandoAcceso Vascular | Complicación del acceso vascular | Infecciones del Catéter de Diálisis | Hemodiálisis | Complicación de hemodiálisis | Disfunción del acceso a la diálisis | ESRD (enfermedad renal en etapa terminal) | Catéter de diálisis
-
NCT07655557Aún no reclutando
-
NCT07655570Aún no reclutandoAngiosarcoma cutáneo
-
NCT07655596Aún no reclutando
-
NCT07655609Aún no reclutandoTrastornos relacionados con el alcohol | Trastorno por consumo de tabaco | Uso de marihuana | Trastornos relacionados con sustancias
-
NCT07655622ReclutamientoCáncer de pulmón de células no pequeñas
-
NCT07655661Aún no reclutandoAdenocarcinoma gástrico | Adenocarcinoma de la unión gastroesofágica
-
NCT07655674Aún no reclutandoTumores submucosos gástricos
-
NCT07655687Aún no reclutandoPacientes de edad avanzada | Cirugía de cáncer | Gestión de temperatura objetivo | Hipotermia Accidental | Recuperación Neurocognitiva Retrasada