T A Mahmood1, M J Dick. 1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Aberdeen Maternity Hospital, Scotland.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To compare conservative management of pre-labor spontaneous rupture of membranes (SROM) with the use of prostaglandin (PG) E2 in healthy parous women at term (gestational age at least 37 weeks). METHODS: An open randomized study was conducted with 100 parous women; 50 were treated conservatively for 24 hours, and 50 were managed actively usingPGE2 gel (1 mg), administered at admission and repeated 6 hours later if labor was not established. Both groups received intravenous oxytocin if labor did not start within 24 hours after admission. RESULTS: The use of PGE2 gel led to a significant reduction in the mean interval (+/- standard error of the mean) from SROM to onset of labor: 17.26 +/- 1.51 hours in the conservative group versus 6.50 +/- 1.23 in the PGE2 group. A significantly smaller proportion of subjects required oxytocin in the PGE2 group (12 versus 38%, P < .02). The two groups were comparable with respect to analgesic requirements. Within 24 hours of SROM, 80% of the women in the PG group and 56% in the conservative group had delivered (P < .02). Most women delivered vaginally, 96% of those managed conservatively and 100% of those managed actively with PGE2. CONCLUSION: Active management using PGE2 gel in parous women with pre-labor SROM significantly improves the time to delivery without influencing the cesarean rate or fetal-maternal infective morbidity.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To compare conservative management of pre-labor spontaneous rupture of membranes (SROM) with the use of prostaglandin (PG) E2 in healthy parous women at term (gestational age at least 37 weeks). METHODS: An open randomized study was conducted with 100 parous women; 50 were treated conservatively for 24 hours, and 50 were managed actively using PGE2 gel (1 mg), administered at admission and repeated 6 hours later if labor was not established. Both groups received intravenous oxytocin if labor did not start within 24 hours after admission. RESULTS: The use of PGE2 gel led to a significant reduction in the mean interval (+/- standard error of the mean) from SROM to onset of labor: 17.26 +/- 1.51 hours in the conservative group versus 6.50 +/- 1.23 in the PGE2 group. A significantly smaller proportion of subjects required oxytocin in the PGE2 group (12 versus 38%, P < .02). The two groups were comparable with respect to analgesic requirements. Within 24 hours of SROM, 80% of the women in the PG group and 56% in the conservative group had delivered (P < .02). Most women delivered vaginally, 96% of those managed conservatively and 100% of those managed actively with PGE2. CONCLUSION: Active management using PGE2 gel in parous women with pre-labor SROM significantly improves the time to delivery without influencing the cesarean rate or fetal-maternal infective morbidity.