Jefferson: As cesarean section rates continue to climb in the United States,
researchers are looking to understand the factors that might contribute.
There has been debate in the field about whether non-medically required
induction of labor leads to a greater likelihood of C-section, with
some studies showing an association and others demonstrating that
inductions at full term can actually protect both the mothers and
babies. In order to tease apart the evidence, a new analysis pooled the
results from five randomized controlled trials including 844 women, and
found no link between induction and rates of C section in uncomplicated
pregnancies of singleton babies at full term. The results were published
online April 13th in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.
“Although babies have been delivered for centuries, we are still
researching the best and safest methods for the mother and baby,” says
Vincenzo Berghella, M.D., Director of Maternal Fetal Medicine and a
Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Thomas Jefferson University.
“Obstetrics today offers women many more options for pain relief and
safe delivery, but we have not studied with proper randomized trials
which methods are most appropriate for which situations, and what
gestational age is best for mother and baby.” In the current analysis
Dr. Berghella together with co-author Gabriele Saccone, M.D., at the
School of Medicine at the University of Naples Federico, in Italy,
combined data from studies that looked at women who delivered between 39
and 40 weeks and 6/7 days, whose water didn’t break prior to onset of
labor, in order to capture only those women whose inductions were
without medical indication, rather than medically necessary.
The researchers did not find any increase in risk of C-section in
women who were inducted at 39 0/7 weeks versus those that weren’t until
at least past 40 0/7 weeks. Instead, the researchers noted several
benefits of induction at 39weeks. First, induction was associated with
slightly less blood loss than non-induced birth (a volume of about
50ml). Second, meconium staining, a potentially serious complication,
was also less likely to occur in babies of induced mothers. Research has
established that women who give birth much past their due date
(40weeks) are more likely to have meconium in the amniotic sac. Meconium
is an unborn baby’s fecal matter, which can be excreted into the sac.
When this occurs there is an increased risk of infection for the mother
and the baby, and a chance that the baby will inhale the matter into his
or her lungs, which in some cases can lead to death.
Finally, as expected, the study found that birth weight was lower in
babies of inducted mothers, but only by 136 grams (about 5 ounces).
“Some experts in our field are calling for induction at full term to
become the standard of care,” says Dr. Berghella . “While I don’t think
this review will change standards of care, it clearly shows that there
are some minor benefits (with induction at 39weeks even without medical
indications) that obstetricians may want to consider.” However, says
Berghella, final word on this topic will have to wait until the results
of an ongoing multi-centered clinical trial from the NIH is published
(NCT01990612).