| Literature DB >> 23400680 |
Jennifer A Hutcheon1,2, K S Joseph3,4,5, Brooke Kinniburgh4, Lily Lee4.
Abstract
To identify maternal, care provider, and institutional-level risk factors for early term (37-38 weeks) elective repeat cesarean delivery in a population-based cohort. Retrospective cohort study of women in the British Columbia (BC) Perinatal Data Registry, BC, Canada, 2008-2011, with an elective repeat cesarean delivery at term. Absolute percent differences (risk differences) in early term delivery rates were calculated according to maternal characteristics, type of care provider, calendar time (day of the week, time of year), and annual institutional obstetrical volume. Of the 7,687 elective repeat cesareans at term in BC, 55 % occurred before 39 + 0 weeks. Early term delivery was significantly more common with multiple previous cesareans [8.2 percentage points (95 % CI 5.5, 10.9) for 2 previous cesareans, 11.3 (95 % CI 5.1, 17.4) for 3 or more previous cesareans], obesity [6.7 percentage points (95 % CI 1.6, 11.7)], and a hospital obstetrical volume <2,500 deliveries per year. Type of care provider and calendar time were not significant risk factors for early term delivery. Early term elective repeat cesarean was common across a wide range of maternal, care provider, and institutional characteristics, suggesting that most obstetrical care settings would benefit from quality-improvement programs to reduce elective repeat cesarean deliveries before 39 weeks. A better understanding of the risks and benefits of early term delivery among obese women and women with multiple previous cesareans is needed given the higher rates of early term delivery observed in these women.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 23400680 PMCID: PMC3889674 DOI: 10.1007/s10995-013-1229-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Child Health J ISSN: 1092-7875
Fig. 1Gestational age of elective repeat cesarean deliveries at term in British Columbia, Canada, 2008–2011
Maternal, care provider, and institutional determinants of early term delivery in 7,687 women with term elective repeat cesarean deliveries in British Columbia, Canada, 2008–2011
| Characteristics of early term deliveries (n = 4,199) | Characteristics of late term deliveries (n = 3,488) | Risk of early term delivery n/N (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | n (%) | ||
|
| |||
| 1 | 3,079 (73.3) | 2,796 (80.2) | 3,079/5,875 (52.4) |
| 2 | 966 (23.0) | 610 (17.5) | 966/1,576 (61.3) |
| 3 or more | 154 (3.7) | 82 (2.4) | 154/236 (65.3) |
|
| |||
| <25 | 303 (7.2) | 293 (8.4) | 303/596 (50.8) |
| 25–29 | 1,061 (25.3) | 816 (23.4) | 1,061/1,877 (56.5) |
| 30–34 | 1,517 (36.1) | 1,269 (36.4) | 1,517/2,786 (54.5) |
| 35–39 | 1,065 (25.4) | 922 (26.4) | 1,065/1,987 (53.6) |
| ≥40 | 253 (6.0) | 188 (5.4) | 253/441 (57.6) |
| <18.5 | 75 (1.8) | 79 (2.3) | 75/154 (48.7) |
| 18.5–24.9 | 1,294 (30.8) | 1,101 (31.6) | 1,294/2,395 (54.0) |
| 25–29.9 | 595 (14.2) | 557 (16.0) | 595/1,152 (51.7) |
| ≥30 | 567 (13.5) | 369 (10.6) | 567/936 (60.6) |
| Missing | 1,668 (39.7) | 1,382 (39.6) | 1,668/3,050 (54.7) |
|
| |||
| Obstetrician | 3,916 (93.3) | 3,294 (94.4) | 3,916/7,210 (54.3) |
| Family doctor | 216 (5.1) | 148 (4.2) | 216/364 (59.3) |
| General surgeon | 67 (1.6) | 46 (1.3) | 67/113 (59.3) |
|
| |||
| <500 | 509 (12.1) | 391 (11.2) | 509/900 (56.6) |
| 500–999 | 725 (17.3) | 506 (14.5) | 725/1,231 (58.9) |
| 1,000–1,499 | 655 (15.6) | 440 (12.6) | 655/1,095 (59.8) |
| 1,500–2,499 | 1,088 (25.9) | 942 (27.0) | 1,088/2,030 (53.6) |
| ≥2,500 | 1,222 (29.1) | 1,209 (34.7) | 1,222/2,431 (50.3) |
| July or August delivery | 735 (17.5) | 603 (17.3) | 735/1,338 (54.9) |
| Thursday or Friday delivery | 1,251 (29.8) | 996 (28.6) | 1,251/2,247 (55.7) |
Fig. 2Differences in risk of early term elective repeat cesarean delivery according to maternal characteristics in British Columbia, Canada, 2008–2011, compared with the reference groups of 1 previous cesarean (number of previous cesareans), maternal age 20–24 (maternal age), and pre-pregnancy body mass index 18.5–24.9 kg/m2 (BMI). Multiple imputation was used to address missing pre-pregnancy BMI values
Fig. 3Differences in risk of early term elective repeat cesarean delivery according to institutional and care provider characteristics in British Columbia, Canada, 2008–2011, compared with the reference groups of obstetrician/gynecologist (type of care provider), ≥2,500 deliveries (obstetrical volume),and times other than July/August or Thursday/Friday delivery (calendar time). Multiple imputation was used to address missing pre-pregnancy BMI values