Can transabdominal ultrasound identify women at high risk for short cervical length?

Alexander M Friedman, Nadav Schwartz, Jack Ludmir, Samuel Parry, Jamie A Bastek, Harish M Sehdev, Alexander M Friedman, Nadav Schwartz, Jack Ludmir, Samuel Parry, Jamie A Bastek, Harish M Sehdev

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether transabdominal cervical length screening could identify women at high risk for having a short cervix on transvaginal ultrasound.

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Setting: Tertiary referral center.

Population: A total of 703 patients with a singleton pregnancy at 18 to 23(+6) weeks of gestation who underwent transabdominal and transvaginal cervical length assessment during anatomy ultrasound at a single institution between January 2007 and October 2011.

Methods: Electronic medical records were reviewed to identify women who met the study criteria.

Main outcome measures: The primary outcome was the number of women with a short transabdominal cervical length (defined as ≤ 30 mm) who needed to undergo transvaginal ultrasound to detect one woman with a short transvaginal cervical length of ≤ 20 mm.

Results: In all, 703 patients were included in the primary analysis; 3.42 women with transabdominal cervical length ≤ 30 mm needed to undergo transvaginal ultrasound to detect one woman with transvaginal ultrasound cervical length ≤ 20 mm. Of women with short transvaginal cervical length ≤ 20 mm, 89.8% had a transabdominal measurement ≤ 30 mm and 96.7% had a transabdominal measurement ≤ 33 mm.

Conclusions: Screening of transabdominal cervical length may represent a useful strategy for detecting women with short cervix on transvaginal ultrasound.

© 2013 Nordic Federation of Societies of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Source: PubMed

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