| Literature DB >> 26762152 |
Celine Miyazaki1, Ralf Moreno Garcia2, Ralfh Garcia Moreno, Erika Ota3, Toshiyuki Swa4, Olufemi T Oladapo5, Rintaro Mori6.
Abstract
This systematic review was to identify available evidence on the effectiveness of tocolysis in inhibiting preterm delivery for women with threatened extremely preterm birth, multiple gestations, and growth-restricted babies, and their infants' outcomes. A comprehensive search using MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Library, CINAHL, POPLINE and the WHO Global Health Library databases was conducted on 14 February 2014. For selection criteria, randomized controlled trials and non-randomized studies that compared tocolysis treatment to placebo or no treatment were considered. Selection of eligible studies, critical appraisal of the included studies, data collection, meta-analyses, and assessment of evidence quality were performed in accordance with the Cochrane Collaboration's guidance and validated assessment criteria. The search identified seven studies for extremely preterm birth, in which three were randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and four were non-randomized studies (non-RCTs). There were no eligible studies identified for women with multiple pregnancy and growth-restricted fetuses. Meta-analyses indicated no significant difference was found for the relative effectiveness of tocolytics versus placebo for prolonging pregnancy in women with extremely preterm birth (RR 1.04, 95% CI 0.83 to 1.31) or reducing the rate of perinatal deaths (RR 2.22, 95% CI 0.26 to 19.24). In summary, there is no evidence to draw conclusions on the effectiveness of tocolytic therapy for women with threatened extremely preterm birth, multiple gestations, and growth-restricted babies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26762152 PMCID: PMC4712490 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-015-0115-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Fig. 1Flow diagram for review questions Q1-Q3
Characteristic of included studies (Randomized controlled trials)
| Extremely preterm birth (less than 28 weeks of gestation) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study ID | Country | Study design | Sample size (groups) | Description of women/patients with preterm labour | Intervention (Description) | Comparison (Description) | Outcomes |
| Richter 2005 [ | Germany | Prospective-RT | 40 ( | Women, 31–42 years of age, between 18 to 24th week of gestation and with uterine contractions duration >30 s, rate ≥ 4/30 min. Cervical effacement >50 % and cervical dilatation of 0–3 cm (nulliparous), and 1–3 cm (primiparous and multiparous) | Atosiban | Placebo | Prolongation of pregnancy >48 h |
| (Initial intravenous infusion of 6.75 mg of atosiban in 0.9 ml of sodium chloride, and followed by high dosage of infusion (300 lg/ min) for 3 h and then low dosage (100 lg/min) up to 45 h.) | (Intravenous infusion of saline solution) | Prolongation of pregnancy >7 days | |||||
| Romero 2000 [ | USA | RCT | 501 ( | Women between gestational age of 20 weeks to 33 weeks, with intact membranes, cervical dilatation of 1 to ≤3 cm, preterm labor required the presence of ≥4 uterine contractions over 30 min, each lasting at least 40 s. | Atosiban | Placebo | Prolongation of pregnancy >24 h |
| 77 a ( | (Initial intravenous infusion of 6.75 mg of atosiban over 1 min and followed by an infusion of 300 μg/min of atosiban for 3 h, and then 100 μg/min for up to 45 h.) | (Matching placebo contained same formulation minus the 5 % mannitol solution of atosiban.) | Prolongation of pregnancy >48 h | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >7 days | |||||||
| Perinatal death | |||||||
| The Canadian PLIG 1992 [ | Canada | RCT | 708 ( | Women between gestational age of 20 to 35 weeks, with uterine contractions four per 20 min or six per 60 min or any uterine activity with ether rupture membranes or cervical dilatation by 2 cm or more. | Ritodrine | Placebo | Perinatal death |
| 151 a ( | (Intravenous infusion of ritodrine in 5 % dextrose at a rate of 0.35 mg/min until the cessation of uterine activity, the failure of therapy, or occurrence of impermissible maternal side effects | (Dextrose solution alone without ritodrine) | |||||
| Multiple gestations | |||||||
| No report found for tocolytic treatment for imminent risk of preterm labor | |||||||
| Growth-restricted fetuses | |||||||
| No report found for tocolytic treatment for imminent risk of preterm labor | |||||||
aSubset of < 28 weeks of gestation sample size extracted from total participant in the study; (n = intervention group vs. n = comparison group); perspective-RT, prospective randomized trial
A summary of effect size for tocolytic treatment versus placebo for extremely preterm birth outcomes in RCTs
| Tocolysis compared to placebo in women with extremely preterm birth (RCTs) | |||||
| Patient or population: Women with extremely preterm birth | |||||
| Intervention: Tocolysis (atosiban and ritodrine) | |||||
| Comparison: Placebo | |||||
| Outcomes | Anticipated absolute effectsf (95 % CI) | Relative effect (95 % CI) | № of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | |
| Risk with placebo | Risk with tocolysis | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >24 h | Study population | RR 1.15 (0.81 to 1.63) | 77 (1 RCT) | ⨁⨁⨁ MODERATE a | |
| 59 per 100 | 68 per 100 (476 to 959) | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >48 h | Study population | RR 1.40 (0.83 to 1.31) | 117 (2 RCTs) | ⨁ VERY LOW a,b | |
| 69 per 100 | 96 per 100 (57 to 90) | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >7 days | Study population | RR 1.05 (0.75 to 1.48) | 117 (2 RCTs) | ⨁ VERY LOW a,b | |
| 65 per 100 | 68 per 100 (49 to 96) | ||||
| Perinatal death | Study population | RR 2.22 (0.26 to 19.24) | 265 (2 RCTs) | ⨁ VERY LOW c,d,e | |
| 17 per 100 | 37 per 100 (4 to 100) | ||||
| GRADE Working Group grades of evidence | |||||
| High quality: We are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect | |||||
| Moderate quality: We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different | |||||
| Low quality: Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect | |||||
| Very low quality: We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect | |||||
| aTotal number of cases less than 300 | |||||
| bAllocation concealment not performed | |||||
| cOne study with unclear randomization and one study without allocation concealment | |||||
| dLarge heterogeneity (>60 %) | |||||
| eSmall sample size (<300) and wide confidence interval | |||||
CI Confidence interval; RR Risk ratio; OR Odds ratio
fThe risk in the intervention group (and its 95 % confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95 % CI)
Fig. 2Forest plot for prolongation of delivery and perinatal death with RCTs that compared tocolytic treatment versus placebo for extremely preterm birth
Characteristics of included studies (Non-randomized studies)
| Extremely preterm birth (less than 28 weeks of gestation) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study ID | Country | Study design | Sample size | Description of women/patients with preterm labour | Intervention (description) | Comparison | Outcome |
| Berghella 2009 [ | USA | Retrospective cohort (January 1998 - December 2005) | 222 ( | Women between 14 and 25 week of gestation with suspected cervical dilation ≥1 cm. | Indomethancin plus some with cerclage | No treatment plus some with cerclage | Prolongation of pregnancy >28, 32, or 35 weeks |
| (50 mg orally, followed by 25 mg orally every 6 h for a maximum of 48 h) | Perinatal death | ||||||
| Birth weight >1500 grams | |||||||
| Cape 2010 [ | USA | Retrospective cohort (2003–2008) |
a138 neonates ( | All women less than 29 weeks of gestation with threaten with premature rupture of membranes. | Indomethancin | No treatment | Neonatal outcomes only including intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, patent ductus arteriosus, and spontaneous intestinal perforations |
| Manuck 2012 [ | USA | Retrospective cohort (January 2000 – June 2011) | 148 ( | Women with a singleton non-anomalous fetus with spontaneous preterm labour and intact membranes, between 20–23.9 week of gestation, and with cervical dilation ≥ 1 cm and effaced > 50 %. | Tocolytic medication | No treatment | Prolongation of pregnancy >7 days |
| (Database record of tocolytic treatment used i.e. magnesium sulfate, indomethacin or nifedipine, either used singly or in combination) | Perinatal death | ||||||
| Visintine 2008 [ | USA | Retrospective cohort (1995–2006) | 101 ( | Asymptomatic women followed from 14 weeks through 23 weeks 6 days gestation with a short cervical length, defined as <25 mm, placed with an ultrasound-indicated cerclage. | Indomethacin plus cerclage | Cerclage only | Prolongation of pregnancy >24, 32, or 35 weeks |
| (50 mg initially orally or rectally, followed by 25 mg orally every 6 h for about 48 h.) | |||||||
| Multiple gestations | |||||||
| No report found for tocolytic treatment for imminent risk of preterm labor | |||||||
| Growth-restricted fetuses | |||||||
| No report found for tocolytic treatment for imminent risk of preterm labor | |||||||
aSample size of infants exposed to in utero indomethancin within 4 weeks of delivery (n = intervenetion group vs. n = comparison group)
A summary of results for tocolytic treatment versus no treatment for extremely preterm birth outcomes in non-RCTs
| Tocolysis compared to no treatment for women with extremely preterm birth (non-RCTs) | |||||
| Patient or population: Women with extremely preterm birth | |||||
| Intervention: Tocolysis | |||||
| Comparison: no treatment | |||||
| Outcomes | Anticipated absolute effects h(95 % CI) | Relative effect (95 % CI) | № of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | |
| Risk with no treatment | Risk with tocolysis | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >7 days | Study population | RR 2.13 (1.12 to 4.06) | 148 (1 non-RCT) | ⨁ VERY LOW a,b | |
| 16 per 100 | 33 per 100 (18 to 63) | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >24 week | Study population | RR 0.91 (0.76 to 1.09) | 101 (1 non-RCT) | ⨁ VERY LOW c | |
| 86 per 100 | 78 per 100 (65 to 94) | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >28 weeks | Study population | RR 0.91 (0.69 to 1.20) | 222 (1 non-RCT) | ⨁ VERY LOW d | |
| 55 per 100 | 50 per 100 (38 to 66) | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >32 weeks | Study population | RR 0.94 (0.76 to 1.17) | 323 (2 non-RCTs) | ⨁ VERY LOW e | |
| 51 per 100 | 48 per 100 (39 to 60) | ||||
| Prolongation of pregnancy >35 weeks | Study population | RR 0.96 (0.75 to 1.23) | 323 (2 non-RCTs) | ⨁ VERY LOW e | |
| 43 per 100 | 41 per 100 (32 to 52) | ||||
| Neonatal survival | Study population | RR 1.12 (0.92 to 1.37) | 222 (1 non-RCT) | ⨁ VERY LOW d | |
| 62 per 100 | 69 per 100 (57 to 85) | ||||
| Perinatal death | Study population | RR 0.73 (0.55 to 0.95) | 370 (2 non-RCT) | ⨁ VERY LOW b,f | |
| 43 per 100 | 31 per 100 (24 to 41) | ||||
| GRADE Working Group grades of evidence | |||||
| High quality: We are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect | |||||
| Moderate quality: We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different | |||||
| Low quality: Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect | |||||
| Very low quality: We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect | |||||
| aThe information was from a study with high risk of confounding variables and unclear risk of outcome data reporting | |||||
| bA wide confidence interval without confounding variable adjusted | |||||
| cThe information was from a study with high risk of selective reporting | |||||
| dThe information was from a study with unclear risk of incomplete outcome data | |||||
| eThe information was from two studies with unclear risk of incomplete outcome data in one study and high risk of selective reporting in another study | |||||
| fThis information was from two studies with unclear risk of incomplete outcome data and on study with high risk of cofounding variables and unclear selective reporting | |||||
| gThis information was from a study with unclear risk of selection of participants, measurement of exposure, incomplete data and selective reporting | |||||
CI Confidence interval; RR Risk ratio; OR Odds ratio
hThe risk in the intervention group (and its 95 % confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95 % CI)