| Literature DB >> 27460158 |
Pierre-Emmanuel Bouet1, Stéphanie Brun2, Hugo Madar2, Elsa Schinkel3, Benjamin Merlot2, Loïc Sentilhes2.
Abstract
The aim of our study was to assess the theoretical and practical knowledge of French obstetricians about the surgical management of postpartum haemorrhage (PPH). Our study is a national anonymous self-administered survey. A total of 363 obstetricians responded to this questionnaire between December 2013 and April 2014. Questionnaire sent through email to all French obstetricians who are members of either of two federations of hospital-based obstetricians. Answers were collected until the end of June 2014. The main outcome measure was obstetricians' level of mastery of each surgical technique. The results were analysed descriptively (proportions). Only the 286 questionnaires fully completed were analysed; the complete response rate was 23% (286/1246). In all, 33% (95/286) of the responding obstetricians reported that they had not mastered sufficiently or even at all the technique for bilateral ligation of the uterine arteries, 37% (105/286) for uterine compression suture, 62% (178/286) for ligation of the internal iliac arteries, and 47% (134/286) for emergency peripartum hysterectomy. In all, 18% (52/286) of respondents stated that they had not mastered any of these techniques. Our study shows that a worrisome number of French obstetricians reported insufficient mastery of the surgical techniques for PPH management.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27460158 PMCID: PMC4962082 DOI: 10.1038/srep30342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of participating obstetricians and the maternity units in which they worked.
| Total n = 286 | |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| • Female | 100 (35; 29–41) |
| • Male | 186 (65; 59–71) |
| Age (years) | 45 (35–55) |
| Years in practice | 15.5 + /− 11.7 |
| Sector | |
| • Public | 224 (78; 73–83) |
| • Private | 34 (12; 8–16) |
| • Public/private | 28 (10; 7–14) |
| Status | |
| • Assistant Chief Resident/Chief Resident | 44 (15; 11–20) |
| • Hospital staff physician | 164 (57; 51–63) |
| • University Professor - Hospital staff physician | 26 (9; 6–13) |
| • Physician from abroad | 4 (2; 1–3) |
| • Physician working in the private sector | 31 (11; 7–15) |
| • Prefers not to say | 17 (6; 3–9) |
| Preferred subspecialty | |
| • Surgery | 93 (32; 27–38) |
| • Obstetrics | 156 (55; 49–60) |
| • Prenatal diagnosis | 25 (9; 6–13) |
| • Assisted reproduction | 12 (4; 2–7) |
| Number of on-call duty shifts per month | 4 (3–5) |
| Level of maternity unit in which they work | |
| • I | 54 (19; 14–24) |
| • II | 99 (35; 29–40) |
| • III | 133 (46; 40–52) |
| Number of deliveries/year in the maternity unit in which they work | 2627 + /− 1329 |
| Obstetrician on-call onsite | |
| • Yes | 236 (83; 78–87) |
| • No | 50 (17; 13–22) |
| Obstetrician on-call at home as well as obstetrician on-call onsite | |
| • Yes | 129 (45; 38–51) |
| • No | 157 (55; 49–61) |
| Can always call a colleague for help? | |
| • Yes | 279 (98; 95–99) |
| • No | 7 (2; 1–5) |
| Department has a written protocol for medical management of postpartum haemorrhage? | |
| • Yes | 284 (99; 97–100) |
| • No | 2 (1; 0–2) |
| Department has a written protocol for surgical management of postpartum haemorrhage? | |
| • Yes | 171 (60; 54–66) |
| • No | 115 (40; 34–66) |
| Site of the closest embolization centre | |
| • In hospital | 145 (51; 45–57) |
| •<20 km from hospital | 66 (23; 18–28) |
| • From 20 to 50 km from hospital | 23 (8; 5–11) |
| •>50 km from your hospital | 62 (18; 14–23) |
Data are expressed as means + /− standard deviations or n (%; 95% confidence intervals).
1Median (interquartile range).
Obstetricians’ practical knowledge.
| Performed alone | Performed with help from a fully qualified doctor | Seen it performed | Never seen it performed | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uterine compression sutures | 140 (49; 43–55) | 50 (17.5; 13–22) | 47 (16; 12–21) | 74 (26; 21–31) |
| Bilateral ligation of the uterine arteries | 163 (57; 51–63) | 48 (17; 13–21) | 56 (20; 15–25) | 43 (15; 11–20) |
| Tsirulnikov’s triple ligation | 134 (47; 41–53) | 44 (15; 11–20) | 40 (14; 0.5–19) | 90 (31; 26–37) |
| Stepwise uterine devascularisation | 22 (8; 5–11) | 6 (2; 1–4.5) | 8 (3; 1–5) | 251 (88; 83–91) |
| Bilateral ligation of the internal iliac arteries | 93 (33; 27–38) | 74 (26; 21–31) | 73 (25.5; 21–30) | 68 (24; 19–29) |
| Emergency hysterectomy | 154 (54; 48–60) | 97 (34; 28–40) | 53 (18.5; 14–23.5) | 17 (6; 3.5–9) |
The data are reported in n (%; 95% confidence intervals).
1Participating obstetricians reported the number of times they were confronted with each situation for each of the mentioned techniques. For each technique, n corresponds to the number of participants who responded “Yes” to the various situations described.
Median number of techniques completely or sufficiently mastered, calculated based on the number of procedures performed by the obstetrician, either alone or with the help of a colleague.
| Level of mastery Techniques | Completely | Sufficiently |
|---|---|---|
| Uterine compression sutures | 5 (3–10) | 2 (0–3) |
| Ligation of uterine arteries | 4 (1–5) | 2 (0–4) |
| Tsirulnikov’s triple ligation | 5 (3–10) | 2 (0–3) |
| Stepwise uterine devascularisation | 4 (1–5,5) | 0 (0–2) |
| Ligation of the internal iliac arteries | 9 (3–20) | 3 (0–5) |
| Emergency hysterectomy | 8 (4–10) | 3 (2–5) |
The data are reported as medians (and their standard deviations).
Surgical technique reported to be used by obstetricians as first, second and third line treatments in a haemodynamically stable patient during severe PPH.
| First line | Second line | Third line | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Uterine compression techniques | 103 (36; 30–42) | 50 (17; 13–22) | 21 (7; 5–11) |
| Distal ligation (of the uterine arteries or Tsirulnikov stepwise triple ligation) | 145 (51; 45–57) | 111 (39; 33–45) | 3 (1; 0–3) |
| Bilateral ligation of the internal iliac arteries | 35 (12; 9–17) | 90 (32; 26–37) | 74 (26; 21–31) |
| Emergency hysterectomy | 2 (1; 0–3) | 32 (11; 8–15) | 156 (55; 49–60) |
| None, a hysterectomy was already done | — | 2 (1; 0–3) | 32 (11; 8–15) |
The data are expressed as n (%; 95% confidence intervals).