Affiliation:
1. Center for Maternal‐Fetal, Neonatal and Reproductive Medicine National Center for Child Health and Development Japan
Abstract
AbstractAimWe investigated cervical parameters predictive of vaginal delivery in elective labor induction among women at 40–41 gestational weeks.MethodsThis Japanese prospective single‐center cohort study was conducted between July 2019 and June 2020. We enrolled women with an uncomplicated singleton pregnancy who underwent labor induction at 40–41 gestational weeks. We analyzed background characteristics and cervical parameters, including Bishop score, cervical length, posterior cervical angle, and changes in cervical parameters before and after cervical dilatation. The endpoint was the rate of vaginal delivery.ResultsOf 142 eligible participants, all 24 multiparous women underwent vaginal delivery. Among the nulliparous women (n = 118), the following categories showed significantly higher rates of vaginal delivery: Bishop scores of ≥6 before and after dilatation, compared with Bishop score <6 (adjusted prevalence ratio (aPR) [95% confidence interval (CI)]; 1.58 [1.17–2.13] and 1.56 [1.13–2.14], respectively) and cervical length of <10 and 10–20 mm before dilation, compared with cervical length of >30 mm (aPR [95% CI]; 1.47 [1.00–2.15] and 2.13 [1.42–3.18], respectively). The posterior cervical angle and other background characteristics showed no significant associations. Furthermore, women with cervical lengths of ≥20 mm before and <20 mm after dilatation showed a higher rate of vaginal delivery, compared to cervical length of ≥20 mm even after dilatation (aPR [95% CI]; 1.95 [1.19–3.20]).ConclusionsHigh Bishop score, short cervical length, and changes in cervical length with dilatation are potential independent predictors of vaginal delivery following elective labor induction in nulliparous women at 40–41 gestational weeks.
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Cited by
1 articles.
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