Interventional radiology in obstetric patients: A population‐based record linkage study of use and outcomes

Author:

Baldwin Heather J.12,Randall Deborah A.12ORCID,Maher Richard3,West Simon P.45,Torvaldsen Siranda126,Morris Jonathan M.124,Patterson Jillian A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sydney Northern Clinical School Women and Babies Research St Leonards New South Wales Australia

2. Northern Sydney Local Health District Kolling Institute St Leonards New South Wales Australia

3. Department of Radiology Royal North Shore Hospital St Leonards New South Wales Australia

4. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Royal North Shore Hospital St Leonards New South Wales Australia

5. The University of Sydney Sydney Medical School‐ Northern St Leonards New South Wales Australia

6. School of Population Health UNSW Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionInterventional radiology (IR) is a technique for controlling hemorrhage and preserving fertility for women with serious obstetric conditions such as placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) or postpartum hemorrhage. This study examined maternal, pregnancy and hospital characteristics and outcomes for women receiving IR in pregnancy and postpartum.Material and methodsA population‐based record linkage study was conducted, including all women who gave birth in hospital in New South Wales or the major tertiary hospital in the neighboring Australian Capital Territory, Australia, between 2003 and 2019. Data were obtained from birth and hospital records. Characteristics and outcomes of women who underwent IR in pregnancy or postpartum are described. Outcomes following IR were compared in a high‐risk cohort of women: those with PAS who had a planned cesarean with hysterectomy. Women were grouped by those who did and those who did did not have IR and were matched using propensity score and other factors.ResultsWe identified IR in 236 pregnancies of 1 584 708 (15.0 per 100 000), including 208 in the delivery and 26 in a postpartum admission. Two‐thirds of women receiving IR in the birth admission received a transfusion of red cells or blood products, 28% underwent hysterectomy and 12.5% were readmitted within 6 weeks. Other complications included: severe maternal morbidity (29.8%), genitourinary tract trauma/repair (17.3%) and deep vein thrombosis/pulmonary embolism (4.3%). Outcomes for women with PAS who underwent planned cesarean with hysterectomy were similar for those who did and did not receive IR, with a small reduction in transfusion requirement for those who received IR.ConclusionsInterventional radiology is infrequently used in pregnant women. In our study it was performed at a limited number of hospitals, largely tertiary centers, with the level of adverse outcomes reflecting use in a high‐risk population. For women with PAS undergoing planned cesarean with hysterectomy, most outcomes were similar for those receiving IR and those not receiving IR, but IR may reduce bleeding.

Funder

National Blood Authority

NSW Ministry of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology,General Medicine

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