Maternal positional therapy for fetal growth and customised birth weight centile benefit in a Bayesian reanalysis of a double-blind, sham-controlled, randomised clinical trial

Author:

Coleman Jerry,Grewal Sahibjot,Warland Jane,Hobson Sebastian,Liu Kuan,Kember AllanORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesTo update the Ghana PrenaBelt Trial’s (GPT) primary outcome data with the latest fetal growth standard and reanalyse it. To estimate the posterior probability, under various clinically relevant prior probabilities, of maternal nightly positional therapy (PT) throughout the third-trimester having a beneficial effect on customised birth weight centile (CBWC) using Bayesian analyses.DesignA reanalysis of a double-blind, sham-controlled, randomised clinical trial.SettingA single, tertiary-level centre in Accra, Ghana.ParticipantsTwo-hundred participants entered, 181 completed and 167 were included in the final analysis. Participants were Ghanaian, healthy, aged 18–35 years, with low-risk, singleton pregnancies in their third-trimester, with Body Mass Index<35 kg/m2at the first antenatal appointment for the index pregnancy and without known fetal abnormalities, pregnancy complications or medical conditions complicating sleep.InterventionsParticipants were randomised to receive treatment with either a PT or sham-PT device.Primary and secondary outcome measuresThe primary outcome was the CBWC using the latest Perinatal Institute, Gestation-Related Optimal Weight calculator. Using Bayesian methods, posterior probabilities of achieving a greater than 0%, 5% and 10% benefit in CBWC with PT were estimated. There was no secondary outcome.ResultsThe median (IQR) CBWC was 42% (15–71) and 28% (9–52) in the PT and sham-PT groups, respectively (difference 8.4%; 95% CI −0.30 to 18.2; p=0.06). For achieving a >0%, >5% and >10% gain in CBWC with PT, the posterior probabilities were highly probable, probable and unlikely, respectively, given a range of prior probabilities reflecting varying degrees of pre-existing enthusiasm and scepticism.ConclusionsMaternal nightly PT throughout the third-trimester did not have a statistically significant effect on CBWC on a frequentist analysis using the latest fetal growth standard. However, from a Bayesian analysis, clinicians can infer that PT is likely to benefit fetal growth but with a modest effect size.Trial registration numberNCT02379728.

Publisher

BMJ

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