The effect of prone positioning on maternal haemodynamics and fetal wellbeing in the third trimester – A primary cohort study with a scoping review

Author:

Ormesher LauraORCID,Catchpole Jessica,Peacock Linda,Pitt Heather,Fabian-Hunt Anastasia,Hayes Dexter,Popp Claudia,Carson Jason M.,van Loon Raoul,Warrander Lynne,Büchling Karli,Heazell Alexander E P

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionSupine sleep position is associated with stillbirth, likely secondary to inferior vena cava compression, and a reduction in cardiac output (CO) and uteroplacental perfusion. Evidence for the effects of prone position in pregnancy is less clear. This study aimed to determine the effect maternal prone position on maternal haemodynamics and fetal heart rate, compared with left lateral position.MethodsTwenty-one women >28 weeks’ gestation underwent non-invasive CO monitoring (Cheetah) every 5 minutes and continuous fetal heart rate monitoring (MONICA) in left lateral (20 minutes), prone (30 minutes), followed by left lateral (20 minutes). Anxiety and comfort were assessed by questionnaires. Regression analyses (adjusted for time) compared variables between positions. The information derived from the primary study was used in an existing mathematical model of maternal circulation in pregnancy, to determine whether occlusion of the inferior vena cava could account for the observed effects. In addition, a scoping review was performed to identify reported clinical, haemodynamic and fetal effects of maternal prone position; studies were included if they reported clinical outcomes or effects or maternal prone position in pregnancy. Study records were grouped by publication type for ease of data synthesis and critical analysis. Meta-analysis was performed where there were sufficient studies.ResultsMaternal blood pressure (BP) and total vascular resistance (TVR) were increased in prone (sBP 109 vs 104 mmHg, p=0.03; dBP 74 vs 67 mmHg, p=0.003; TVR 1302 vs 1075 dyne.s-1cm-5, p=0.03). CO was reduced in prone 5.7 vs 7.1 mL/minute, p=0.003). Fetal heart rate, variability and decelerations were unaltered. However, fetal accelerations were less common in prone position (86% vs 95%, p=0.03). Anxiety was reduced after the procedure, compared to beforehand (p=0.002), despite a marginal decline in comfort (p=0.04).The model predicted that if occlusion of the inferior vena cava occurred, the sBP, dBP and CO would generally decrease. However, the TVR remained relatively consistent, which implies that the MAP and CO decrease at a similar rate when occlusion occurs. The scoping review found that maternal and fetal outcomes from 47 included case reports of prone positioning during pregnancy were generally favourable. Meta-analysis of three prospective studies investigating maternal haemodynamic effects of prone position found an increase in sBP and maternal heart rate, but no effect on respiratory rate, oxygen saturation or baseline fetal heart rate (though there was significant heterogeneity between studies).ConclusionProne position was associated with a reduction in CO but an uncertain effect on fetal wellbeing. The decline in CO may be due to caval compression, as supported by the computational model. Further work is needed to optimise the safety of prone positioning in pregnancy.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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