| Literature DB >> 31291375 |
Ellen Blix1, Robyn Maude2, Elisabeth Hals3, Sezer Kisa1, Elisabeth Karlsen4, Ellen Aagaard Nohr5, Ank de Jonge6, Helena Lindgren7, Soo Downe8, Liv Merete Reinar9, Maralyn Foureur10, Aase Serine Devold Pay11, Anne Kaasen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intermittent auscultation (IA) is the technique of listening to and counting the fetal heart rate (FHR) for short periods during active labour and continuous cardiotocography (CTC) implies FHR monitoring for longer periods. Although the evidence suggests that IA is the best way to monitor healthy women at low risk of complications, there is no scientific evidence for the ideal device, timing, frequency and duration for IA. We aimed to give an overview of the field, identify and describe methods and practices for performing IA, map the evidence and accuracy for different methods of IA, and identify research gaps.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31291375 PMCID: PMC6619817 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author, year, country | Aim of study | Design and study population | Information of interest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smith et al, 2019, Ireland [ | Compare the effect on caesarean section rates of admission CTG vs. IA | RCT | Descriptions of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration) |
| Kamala et al, 2018, Tanzania [ | Compare continuous fetal heart rate monitoring using the Moyo strap-on monitor with IA using a Pinard for the detection of FHR abnormalities | Pre- and post-intervention study. | Descriptions of IA practice (device, frequency, timing, abnormal FHR) |
| Maude et al, 2014, NZ [ | Describe the implementation of the Intelligent Structured Intermittent Auscultation (ISIA) framework in one maternity unit | Mixed method pre- and post-intervention study. | Descriptions of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration, definitions of normal and abnormal FHR, assessments of uterine contractions, fetal movements and maternal pulse). |
| Rathore et al, 2011, India [ | Evaluate fetal scalp stimulation test as an adjunct to IA in diagnosis of intrapartum fetal acidosis | Prospective observational cohort | Descriptions of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration) |
| Maude et al, 2009, NZ [ | Explore the fetal heart rate monitoring practices of midwives and doctors and determine compliance with a NZ evidence-based guideline for fetal heart monitoring | Retrospective audit of | Descriptions of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration, definitions of normal and abnormal FHR, assessments of uterine contractions, fetal movements and maternal pulse, documentation practices for IA). |
| Soltani, 2009, Iran [ | Present and evaluate a new electronic device for IA | Presentation of a new device for IA, with evaluations from 28 medical trainees | Description of a device for IA, a Personal Digital Assistant, an electronic stethoscope attached to a hand-held computer. |
| Madaan & Trivedi, 2006, India [ | Compare the effect of EFM and IA for intrapartum fetal monitoring | RCT | Descriptions of IA practices (frequency, timing, duration, definition of abnormal FHR) |
| Impey et al, 2003, Ireland [ | Compare the effect on neonatal outcome of admission CTG vs. IA | RCT | Descriptions of IA practices (frequency, timing, duration) |
| Mires et al, 2001, UK [ | Compare the effect on neonatal outcome of admission CTG vs. IA and levels of obstetric interventions in a low-risk obstetric population | RCT | Descriptions of IA practices (device, duration) |
| Gilles et al, 1997, Australia [ | Survey the use of IA throughout maternity units in Western Australia, compare protocols and suggest a protocol for use in women with low-risk labours | Survey to all hospitals in Western Australia | Descriptions of IA practices (frequency, definition abnormal FHR). A new protocol for IA based on review of practices and research literature |
| Vintzileos et al, 1993, Greece [ | Compare the effect on neonatal outcome of EFM vs. IA | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration, definition of abnormal FHR, assessments of uterine contractions) |
| Luthy et al, 1987, Canada and USA [ | Compare the effect on neonatal outcome of EFM vs. IA | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration,definition of normal FHR, definition of abnormal FHR, assessments of uterine contractions) |
| Neldam et al, 1986, Denmark [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of EFM vs. IA | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration, definition of normal baseline, definition of abnormal FHR) |
| MacDonald et al, 1985, Ireland [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of EFM vs. IA | RCT | Description of IA practices (devise, frequency, duration, definition of abnormal FHR) |
| Appelgate et al, 1979, USA [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of EFM vs. IA | RCT | Description of IA practices (frequency, timing, duration, definition of normal baseline, definition of abnormal FHR) |
| Haverkamp et al, 1979, USA [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of EFM alone or EFM with option to FBS or IA | RCT | Description of IA practices (frequency, timing, duration, definition abnormal FHR) |
| Kelso et al, 1978, UK [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of EFM vs. IA | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration, definition normal baseline) |
| Kamala et al, 2018, Tanzania [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of IA with Doppler device vs. IA with Pinard | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, definition of abnormal baseline). |
| Mdoe et al, 2018, Tanzania [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of IA with Doppler device vs. IA with Pinard | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, definition of normal and abnormal baseline. |
| Byaruhanga et al, 2015, Uganda [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of IA with Doppler device vs. IA with Pinard | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, frequency, timing, duration, how FHR was counted, definition of normal baseline, definition of abnormal FHR, assessment of maternal pulse) |
| Mahomed et al, 1994, Zimbabwe [ | Compare the effect on maternal and neonatal outcome of IA with Doppler device by a research midwife, Pinard by a research midwife, Pinard by midwife on duty or intermittent CTG | RCT | Description of IA practices (device, frequency, timing) |
| Simpson et al, 1999, Canada [ | Investigate if the accuracy of auscultation could be improved with the use of a heart rate meter | Accuracy study | Description of the accuracy of baseline variability, periodic changes and if the FHR pattern was assessed as reassuring or non-reassuring when counting alone and counting by the help of a meter |
| Strong & Jarles, 1992, USA [ | Evaluate current practice of auscultation on the detection of decelerations | Accuracy study | Description of accuracy of baseline, deceleration nadir and deceleration duration |
| Miller et al, 1984, USA [ | Define what characteristics of FHR and FHR patterns can be recognised by IA | Accuracy study | Descriptions of accuracy of baseline, accelerations without periodic change and non-uniform), saltatory pattern, decelerations (early, variable, late with good variability and late with diminished variability |
| Day et al, 1968, Australia [ | Determine accuracy and usefulness of clinical measurement of the FHR | Accuracy study | Descriptions of auscultation errors (random error, error biased towards normality, error based on inability to count during contractions) |
Characteristics and quality of included guidelines.
| Organisation/country, year, guideline title, developed by | Description | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|
| World Health Organization, 2018 [ | Guideline including 56 recommendations for intrapartum care. Recommendations 13 and 18 are about IA | • The guideline group included persons from all relevant areas/professions |
| International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), 2017 [ | Position statement on use of IA | • Unclear who developed the statement |
| International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO), 2015 [ | Consensus guideline describing devices for IA, discusses advantages and disadvantages of the devices, providing recommendations for when to continue IA in settings where CTG is available and techniques for how to perform IA | • The guideline development group included 2 midwives, the FIGO Intrapartum Fetal Monitoring Expert Panel of 45 obstetricians |
| Denmark, 2017 [ | Guideline providing recommendations on when to use IA, intermittent CTG and continuous CTG during intrapartum care | • The guideline development group included 2 midwives and 15 obstetricians |
| Norway, 2014 [ | Guideline with recommendations for intrapartum fetal monitoring, cord clamping and cord-blood gas analyses | • The guideline development group included 1 midwife and 8 obstetricians |
| Sweden, 2015 [ | Guideline for fetal monitoring during active labour | • The guideline development group included 1 midwife, 1 neonatologist, 3 obstetricians |
| England and Wales, 2014 [ | Guideline providing recommendations for intrapartum care. Recommendations Chapters 1.4., 1.10 and 1.13 include recommendations on IA | • The working group included 3 midwives, 3 obstetricians, 1 neonatologist, 1 obstetric anesthesiologist, 2 patient/carer/consumer representatives |
| Canada, 2007, reaffirmed 2018 [ | Guideline for intrapartum fetal monitoring | • Principal authors were 2 medical doctors and 1 nurse; Consensus committee included 11 medical doctors, 1 midwife, 1 nurse, 1 unknown profession |
| Australia and New Zealand, 2014 [ | Guideline for intrapartum fetal monitoring | • The guideline development group included 2 midwives, 8 obstetricians, 2 MFM specialist, 1 medical specialist, 3 RANZOG administrative staff. In addition, a NZ consultation group with 3 obstetricians, 2 midwives. |
| USA, 2015 [ | Guideline for IA during childbirth | • The guideline development group included 6 midwives |
| USA, 2018 [ | Position statement for fetal heart monitoring during childbirth | • The guideline development group is not described |
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram of included studies.
Outcome events and meta-analyses.
| Outcome | No. of studies | Events, n/N Doppler | Events, n/N Pinard | Effect size (95% CI) | I |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apgar score <7 at five minutes | 4 | 66/4034 | 63/4402 | 1.12 (0.65–1.93) | 49 |
| Caesarean section | 4 | 696/4034 | 704/4402 | 1.16 (0.91–1.49) | 84 |
| Composite neonatal outcome | 2 | 60/2730 | 63/2798 | 0.98 (0.69–1.39) | 0 |
| Stillbirth and early neonatal death | 4 | 31/4034 | 39/4402 | 0.92 (0.44–1.91) | 48 |
| Assisted vaginal delivery | 1 | 104/312 | 78/625 | 0.72 (0.48–1.08) | - |
| Detection of abnormal FHR | 4 | 327/4034 | 226/4402 | 1.77 (1.29–2.43) | 74 |
1Random effect model.
2One study measured Apgar score <6 at five minutes.
3Fresh stillbirth, early neonatal death < 24 h and admission to Neonatal Intensive care unit. Slightly different definitions in the two studies.
4Slightly different definitions across the studies.