29
MANAGEMENT OF POSTTERM PREGNANCY Leslie Ablard, MD OB/GYN Mowery Women’s Clinic Salina, KS 1

Management of Postterm Pregnancy

  • Upload
    tadhg

  • View
    60

  • Download
    3

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Management of Postterm Pregnancy. Leslie Ablard , MD OB/GYN Mowery Women’s Clinic Salina, KS. Postterm = 42 weeks. Definition: ACOG Bulletin 55, Sept 2004. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

1

MANAGEMENT OF POSTTERM PREGNANCY

Leslie Ablard, MDOB/GYNMowery Women’s ClinicSalina, KS

Page 2: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

2

POSTTERM = 42 WEEKS

Page 3: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

3

DEFINITION:ACOG BULLETIN 55, SEPT 2004 Postterm pregnancy refers to pregnancies

that extend beyond 42 weeks gestation (294 days, or estimated date of deliver (EDD) +14 days)

Accurate pregnancy dating is critical to the diagnosis

The term “postdates” is poorly defined and should be avoided

Although some cases are a result of the inability to accurate define the EDD, many cases result from a true prolongation of gestation

Reported frequency of postterm pregnancy is 7%

Page 4: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

4

ETIOLOGIC FACTORS Most frequent cause of prolonged gestation

A. Placental Sulfatase deficiency B. Error in Dating C. Fetal Anencephaly

Other Associations Male Sex Genetic Predisposition Primiparity h/o prior postterm pregnancy

When postterm pregnancy truly exists, the most common cause is Unknown

Page 5: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

5

ASSESSMENT OF GESTATIONAL AGE Accurate dating is important for minimizing

the false diagnosis of postterm pregnancy MOST RELIABLY AND ACCURATELY

DETERMINED EARLY IN PREGNANCY Questions at new ob visit

When was the first date of your last period? Do you have regular cycles? Approx how many days between cycles? Are you sure about the given date? Where you on any birth control when you got

pregnant? When did you first find out you were pregnant?

Page 6: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

6

ACCURACY OF LMP There are many inaccuracies in even the

“surest” of LMPs Recall Delayed Ovulation Irregular cycles

Predicting delivery date by ultrasound and last menstrual period in early gestation. Obstet Gynecol. 2001 Feb;97(2):189-94.

The last menstrual period (LMP) was considered certain in 13,541

When ultrasound was used instead of certain LMP, the number of postterm pregnancies decreased from 10.3% to 2.7% (P <.001).

Page 7: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

7

ACCURACY OF LMP

Comparison of pregnancy dating by last menstrual period, ultrasound scanning, and their combination. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2002 Dec;187(6):1660-6 3655 women with sure LMP LMP reports prolonged gestation 2.8 days longer on average

than ultrasound scanning, yielded substantially more postterm births (12.1% vs 3.4%), and predict delivery among term births less accurately

Page 8: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

8

ULTRASOUND DATING? When sure LMP and US vary greater than 8%

Approx 7 days up to 20 weeks 14 days between 20-30 weeks 21 days beyond 30 weeks

Page 9: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

9

RISKS TO THE FETUS Risk of perinatal mortality (stillbirth and early

neonatal deaths) TWICE that of term. 4-7 deaths vs 2-3 deaths per 1,000 deliveries Increases SIX fold and higher at 43 weeks

Uteroplacental insufficiency Meconium aspiration Intrauterine infection

Postterm pregnancy is an independent risk factor for low umbilical artery pH at delivery and low 5 min APGAR scors

Higher incidence of fetal macrosomia, although no evidence supports inducing labor as a preventative measure in such cases Prolonged labor, CPD, Shoulder Dystocia

Page 10: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

10

RISKS TO THE FETUS Approx 20% of postterm fetuses have

dysmaturity syndrome Infants with characteristics resembling chronic

IUGR from uteroplacental insufficiency Oligo, meconium aspiration, hypogycemia, seizures,

respiratory insufficency, non-reassuring fetal testing Long term sequelae not clear

One large prospective follow up study of children 1-2 yrs, general intelligence, physical milestones, and frequency of intercurrent illnesses were not significantly different between normal infants born at term and those born postterm

Fetuses born postterm are at increased risk of death within the first year- most have no known cause

Page 11: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

11

RISKS TO THE PREGNANT WOMAN Increased labor dystocia- 9-12% vs 2-7% Increased risk in severe perineal injury

related to macrosomia- 3.3% vs 2.6% Doubled rate of c-section----endometritis,

hemorrhage, thromboembolic events ANXIETY

Page 12: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

12

ARE THERE INTERVENTIONS THAT DECREASE POSTTERM PREGNANCY? Accurate dating by early sono---not current

standard of prenatal care in the US Membrane sweeping studies are conflicting

Page 13: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

13

WHEN SHOULD ANTENATAL TESTING BEGIN? No studies to state when the best time to

start, frequency, or type of testing to use (no one with include an unmonitored control group)

No data that testing adversely affects patients experiencing postterm pregnancy

So, DO IT

Page 14: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

14

PERINATAL MORTALITY Figure 1. (A) The rates

of stillbirth (-▪-) and infant mortality (-) for each week of gestation from 28 to 43+ weeks expressed per 1000 live births. (B) The rates of stillbirth (dark gray) and infant mortality (light gray) in the same population of 171,527 singleton births expressed as a function of 1000 ongoing (undelivered) pregnancies.

Page 15: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

15

WHAT FORM OF TESTING? Options include: NST, BPP, modified BPP (NST

with AFI), Contraction Stress Test No single method superior Evaluation of AFI important

Definition of oligo in the postterm not been established

No vertical pocked more than 2-3 cm AFI less than 5

My choice- starting at 41 weeks- twice weekly monitoring including NST with modified BPP (NST + AFI)

Page 16: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

16

INDUCE OR WAIT Management of “low-risk” postterm

pregnancy is controversial Factors to include- gestational age, results of

antenatal testing, cervix, maternal preference

Many studies exclude those with favorable cervices

Page 17: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

17

UNFAVORABLE CERVIX Small advantage using cervical ripening agents Several large multicenter randomized studies of

management after 40 week report favorable outcomes with routine inductions starting at 41 weeks Largest study found that routine induction at 41

weeks, found elective induction resulted in lower c-section rates primarily related to fewer c/s for non-reassuirng fetal heart rate tracings

Patient satisfaction was also higher Meta-analysis of 19 trials found that routine induction

after 41 weeks was associated with a lower rate of perinatal mortality and no increase in c/s rate and no effect on operative vag delivery, use of analgesia, or FHRA

Page 18: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

18

INDUCE AT 41 WEEKS? Large amounts of evidence suggest that

routine induction at 41 weeks gestation has fetal benefit without incurring the additional maternal risks of a higher rate of c-section.

This conclusion has not been universally accepted

Smaller studies report mixed results Two studies reported an increase in c/s rate

among certain subgroups of patients – “high risk”

Page 19: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

19

PROSTAGLANDINS FOR INDUCTION Valuable tool Several placebo controlled trails have reported

significant changes in Bishop scores, duration of labor, lower maximum doses of oxytocin, and reduced incidence of c/s.

No standardized doses have been established Higher doses (especially PGE1) have been

associated with tachysystole and hyperstimulation resulting in non-reassuring fetal status

Lower doses are preferable with PG is used and FHR monitoring should be done routinely before and after placement

Page 20: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

20

VBAC Do not use prostaglandins

Foley bulb + pitocin Limited evidence on the efficacy or safety of

VBAC after 42 weeks- no firm recommendations can be made

Page 21: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

21

INDUCTION OF LABOR 41 weeks?

Consistently shown to have no increased morbidity/mortality even with nulliparous patients and unfavorable cervices

39 weeks? Multiparous patients appear to have no increase risk of

c/s, morbidity, mortality Do have increased use of resources Conflicting data on nulliparous Recent study found no increase risk of c/s with

unfavorable cervix after eliminating medical inductions (preeclampsia, diabetes, etc)

Elective Induction Compared With Expectant Management in Nulliparous Women With an Unfavorable Cervix Obstetrics & Gynecology. 117(3):583-587, March 2011.

May be a baseline risk for c/s un-related to gestational age or cervix

Page 22: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

22

2447 women underwent c/s from 30 hospitals in LA and Iowa

25% c/s performed for “failure to progress” at 3 cm or less 40% of “prolonged 2nd stage” did not meet ACOG criteria

(45% nulliparous)

Page 23: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

23

INDICATIONS FOR C/S

-32,443 patients undergoing c/s 2003-2009

- Obstet &Gynecol 2011

Page 24: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

24

FRIEDMAN CURVE

Page 25: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

25

ZHANG’S NEW LABOR CURVE- SEPT 2010

26,838 women in non-augmented, active labor Multiparous do not enter active labor until 5 cm Nulliparous do not ener active labor until 6 cm Labor progresses more slowly than previously described

Page 26: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

26

GIVE ‘EM A CHANCE!! Friedman was wrong ( or wrong for today)

Labor curve of modern times is slower with the active phase in primips not occurring until 6cm dilated!

Many c-sections performed when not even in active labor

Don’t be afraid of serial inductions Use all your armamentarium- prostaglandins,

foley bulb, pitocin, AROM, FSE, IUPC, operative delivery

Page 27: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

27

SUMMARY Postterm pregnancy may in itself be “high

risk” Establish a EDD early and as precisely as

possible- early sono? Consider antenatal testing at 41 weeks vs

induction An unfavorable cervix may not be as much of

a risk factor for c-section as underlying issues- macrosomia, fetal intolerance to labor, etc.

Where is the nadir for fetal well-being and maternal outcomes? 39 weeks? 41 weeks?

Patience is important for today’s labor curve

Page 28: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

28

POSTTERM PREGNANCY IS LIKE POPCORN

Page 29: Management of   Postterm  Pregnancy

29

THANK YOU