| Literature DB >> 23981569 |
Sinéad M O'Neill1, Patricia M Kearney, Louise C Kenny, Tine B Henriksen, Jennifer E Lutomski, Richard A Greene, Ali S Khashan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Caesarean delivery has increased worldwide, however, the effects on fertility are largely unknown. This systematic review aims to compare subsequent sub-fertility (time to next pregnancy or birth) among women with a Caesarean delivery to women with a vaginal delivery.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23981569 PMCID: PMC3765853 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-13-165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Figure 1Study selection. Flow chart of identification and selection of studies for inclusion in the systematic review.
Characteristics of studies included in the systematic review
| Eijsink, 2008 [ | Holland / Cohort | 1998-2002/ Follow-up to 2005 | Single hospital database | 547 | IPI (scale) | Kaplan-Meier curves | Breech emergency & elective | Primiparous | Multiple deliveries, congenital malformations, uterine anomalies |
| Collin, 2006 [ | Sub-Saharan Africa / Cohort | 1993-2003/ Minimum follow-up 3 years | Cross-sectional standardised survey data from 22 countries | 35,398 | IPI ( >1 or <5 years) | Cox regression | No | Multiparous | Women with >1 terminated pregnancy; women currently breastfeeding; abstaining from intercourse or using contraception; women in South Africa (due to high elective Caesarean rates); stillbirths; women outside 14–49 years of age |
| Smith, 2006 [ | Scotland / Cohort | 1980-1984/ Follow-up to 1999 | Population-based database | 109,991 | IPI (scale) | Logistic regression | Emergency, elective for breech, all other pre-labour Caesarean | Primiparous | Multiple births, preterm births, perinatal deaths, missing values |
| Murphy, 2002 [ | UK / Cohort | 1991-1992/ Minimum follow-up 3 years | Self-completed questionnaire data | 3,994 | IPI (>1 or >3 years) | Logistic regression | No | Multiparous | Women with unplanned pregnancies |
| Zdeb, 1984 [ | USA/ Cohort | 1975/ Follow-up for 5 years | Single hospital database | 5,513 | IPI (scale) | X2 analysis | No | Primiparous | Stillbirths, high-forceps, mid-forceps, breech, version and extraction deliveries |
| Tollånes, 2007 [ | Norway/ Cohort | 1969-1996/ Follow-up to 2003 | Nationwide Birth Register | 596,341 | BI (scale) | Logistic regression | Breech, pre-eclampsia, low-risk Caesarean groups | Primiparous | Women dying aged <50, women who changed partners, multiple pregnancies |
| Tower, 2000 [ | UK / Cohort | 1992-1993/ Follow-up for 5 years | Single hospital database | 1,152 | BI, IPI (scale) | Not stated | Failure to progress, fetal distress | Primiparous | None stated |
| Huttly, 1990 [ | Brazil/ Cohort | 1982/ Follow-up for 4 years | Data obtained from interview of mothers | 4,683 | BI (within 35–52 months) | Not stated | No | Multiparous | Tubal ligation/ sterilisation |
| Hemminki,1987 [ | Sweden/ Cohort | 1973, 1976/ Follow-up for 5 years | Nationwide Birth Register survey data | 12,918 | BI (<5 years) | X2 analysis | No | Primiparous | Hysterectomy, non-Swedish women, rare blood groups, multiple pregnancies, malformations, birth weight <2000g, perinatal death |
| LaSala, 1987 [ | USA/ Case control | 1978/ Follow-up for 3 years | Single hospital logbook | 570 | BI (>2 years) | X2 analysis | No | Primiparous | Missing hospital records, sterilisation, women using contraception |
| Hemminki,1985 [ | USA/ Cohort | 1957-1982/ Minimum 1 year follow-up, maximum 25 years | Nationwide Birth Register | 812 | BI (scale) | Kaplan-Meier curves | No | Primiparous | Women outside 15–44 years of age; women living in Alaska or Hawaii; women with no live births or more than two abortions; multiple births; missing data; perinatal deaths; birth weight <1500g; women who put their child up for adoption |
Table legend: Inter-pregnancy interval, Birth interval. Data for interval categories: Continuous refers to the median/mean IPI or BI, >1 year refers to trying to conceive for more than 1 year, >3 years refers to trying to conceive for greater than 3 years, <5 years refers to conceiving within 5 years, >2 years refers to being sub-fertile for greater than 2 years.
Figure 2Caesarean section and subsequent sub-fertility. Fixed-effect model of the relationship between Caesarean delivery and subsequent sub-fertility (time to next pregnancy or birth) compared to vaginal delivery from five published studies including 750,407 women.
Figure 3Funnel plot. Funnel plot assessing publication bias in the relationship between Caesarean delivery and subsequent sub-fertility (time to next pregnancy or birth) compared to vaginal delivery from five published studies.
Subgroup analyses of the impact of Caesarean section on subsequent sub-fertility (time to next pregnancy or birth)
| n = 5 | 0.90 [0.86, 0.93] | 30% | |
| | | | |
| Primiparous women only | n = 2 | 0.91 [0.87, 0.96] | 0% |
| Not limited to primiparous women | n = 3 | 0.81 [0.73, 0.90] | 0% |
| | | | |
| Pre-2000 | n = 1 | 0.80 [0.68, 0.94] | NA |
| Post-2000 | n = 4 | 0.90 [0.86, 0.94] | 19% |
| | | | |
| <10 years | n = 3 | 0.81 [0.73, 0.90] | 0% |
| >10 years | n = 2 | 0.91 [0.87, 0.96] | 0% |
| | | | |
| Specified* | n = 2 | 0.92 [0.88, 0.97] | 88% |
| Not specified | n = 3 | 0.81 [0.73, 0.90] | 0% |
| | | | |
| <35,000 | n = 2 | 0.79 [0.67, 0.92] | 0% |
| >35,000 | n = 3 | 0.90 [0.87, 0.95] | 13% |
| | | | |
| a. Birth Interval (BI) | n = 2 | 0.89 [0.84, 0.94] | 44% |
| Inter-pregnancy interval (IPI) | n = 3 | 0.91 [0.85, 0.97] | 45% |
| b. Categorical measure (e.g. > 3 years) | n = 3 | 0.81 [0.73, 0.90] | 0% |
| Continuous measure (e.g. median IPI) | n = 2 | 0.91 [0.87, 0.96] | 0% |
Table Legend: Data refer to the pooled odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for each subgroup analysis. I is a statistical measure of heterogeneity between 0% and 100%, with higher percentages implying great heterogeneity. *Specified: refers to the indication for mode of delivery and includes in Smith (2006) [18] assisted (instrumental) vaginal delivery, vaginal breech, elective Caesarean for breech, emergency Caesarean and all other prelabour Caesareans. For Tollanes (2007) [16] includes: breech presentation, low risk obstetric group, and a pre-eclampsia group.
Main findings of studies included in the systematic review
| Eijsink et al., 2008 [ | In women with a breech delivery, a longer IPI among the elective CS group was reported, however there were only 35 women in this group | |
| Zdeb et al., 1984 [ | No significant difference in the timing of subsequent pregnancies among the two groups | |
| #Tower et al., 2000 [ | No evidence that women delivering by Caesarean section have significantly longer waiting times to next pregnancy or birth | |
| Hemminki, 1987 [ | Proportion of women with a previous Caesarean section less likely to have a subsequent delivery, although no significant difference found | |
| LaSala, 1987 [ | Women with a previous Caesarean were less likely to have a subsequent birth and took longer to conceive than women with a previous vaginal delivery. However the sample size was very small | |
| Hemminki et al., 1985 [ | No significant difference in waiting time to next birth among women with a previous Caesarean section compared to women with a previous vaginal delivery |
Table Legend: Spontaneous vaginal delivery, Caesarean section, Months, Inter-pregnancy Interval, Birth Interval, Relative Risk, Interquartile Range.
#Tower et al. reported both the median IPI and BI.
Quality assessment of studies included in the systematic review
| Eijsink et al., 2008 [ | Moderate | Low | Low | High (no adjustment for confounders reported, matched by maternal age and date of delivery) | Low | Minimal | High |
| Collin et al., 2006 [ | Low | Low | Low | Minimal (adjusted for age, parity, level of education, urban or rural residence and young age at first intercourse) | Minimal | Low | Low |
| Smith et al., 2006 [ | Minimal | Low | Low | Minimal (adjusted for marital status, deprivation, birth weight, infant sex, maternal age, maternal height and method of induction) | Minimal | Minimal | Low |
| Murphy et al., 2002 [ | Low | Low | Low | Minimal (adjusted for maternal and paternal age, co-habitation, oral contraceptive pill use, cigarette exposure, alcohol consumption, educational level, ethnicity, parity, change of partner, maternal BMI) | Minimal | Minimal | Low |
| Zdeb et al., 1984 [ | Low | Low | Low | Moderate (none reported). Matching by race, complications of pregnancy, maternal education and maternal age | Moderate | Low | High |
| Tollånes et al., 2007 [ | Minimal | Low | Low | Minimal (stratified by maternal age, level of education and infant survival). Sub-group analyses by low-risk group, pre-eclampsia and breech presentation | Low | Minimal | Low |
| Tower et al., 2000 [ | Low | Low | Low | Moderate (no adjustment for confounding). Matching by age and date of delivery | Moderate | Moderate | High |
| Huttly et al., 1990 [ | Low | Low | Low | Minimal (adjusted for income, age, education and parity) | Moderate | Moderate | Low |
| Hemminki, 1987 [ | Low | Low | Low | Moderate (no adjustment for confounders). Matching by year of birth, maternal age and infant sex | Moderate | Low | High |
| LaSala et al., 1987 [ | Moderate | Low | Minimal | Moderate (no adjustment for confounding reported). Matching by age and parity | Moderate | Moderate | High |
| Hemminki et al., 1985 [ | Low | Low | Minimal | Moderate (no adjustment reported). Matching by date of birth, mother’s age, race and marital status | Moderate | Minimal | High |
Table Legend: *Assessment of confounding factor bias was done by evaluation of each study’s assessment of potential confounders by four methods: adjustment with regression, matching, assessment of potential confounders on univariate analyses that were found not to be significantly different between groups, and assessment of potential confounders on univariate analyses that were different between groups and not controlled for.