Mid-trimester endovaginal sonography in women at high risk for spontaneous preterm birth

  • Thomas Jefferson University ROR
  • University of Alabama at Birmingham ROR
  • Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist ROR
  • George Washington University ROR
  • Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development ROR
  • Columbia University ROR
  • From Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C. (P.J.M.); the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Md. (M.K., C.Y.S.); the Biostatistics Center, ...

JAMA, 286(11), 1340-1348

DOI 10.1001/jama.286.11.1340 PMID 11560539

Abstract

Context

Although shortened cervical length has been consistently associated with spontaneous preterm birth, it is not known when in gestation this risk factor becomes apparent.

Objective

To determine whether sonographic cervical findings between 16 weeks' and 18 weeks 6 days' gestation predict spontaneous preterm birth and whether serial evaluations up to 23 weeks 6 days' gestation improve prediction in high-risk women.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND

Participants

Blinded observational study performed between March 1997 and November 1999 at 9 university-affiliated medical centers in the United States in 183 women with singleton gestations who previously had experienced a spontaneous birth before 32 weeks' gestation.

OBSERVATION: Certified sonologists performed 590 endovaginal sonographic examinations at 2-week intervals. Cervical length was measured from the external os to the functional internal os along a closed endocervical canal. Funneling and dynamic cervical shortening were also recorded.

Main Outcome Measure

Spontaneous preterm birth before 35 weeks' gestation, analyzed by selected cutoff values of cervical length.

Results

Forty-eight women (26%) experienced spontaneous preterm birth before 35 weeks' gestation. A cervical length of less than 25 mm at the initial sonographic examination was associated with a relative risk (RR) for spontaneous preterm birth of 3.3 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.1-5.0; sensitivity = 19%; specificity = 98%; positive predictive value = 75%). After controlling for cervical length, neither funneling (P =.24) nor dynamic shortening (P =.054) were significant independent predictors of spontaneous preterm birth. However, using the shortest ever observed cervical length on serial evaluations, after any dynamic shortening, the RR of a cervical length of less than 25 mm for spontaneous preterm birth increased to 4.5 (95% CI, 2.7-7.6; sensitivity = 69%; specificity = 80%; positive predictive value = 55%). Compared with a single cervical measurement at 16 weeks' to 18 weeks 6 days' gestation, serial measurements at up to 23 weeks 6 days significantly improved the prediction of spontaneous preterm birth in a receiver operating characteristic curve analysis (P =.03).

Conclusions

Cervical length assessed by endovaginal sonography between 16 weeks' and 18 weeks 6 days' gestation, augmented by serial evaluations, predicts spontaneous preterm birth before 35 weeks' gestation in high-risk women.

Topics

endovaginal sonography cervical length preterm birth prediction, short cervix mid-trimester ultrasound spontaneous preterm delivery, serial cervical length measurements high risk pregnancy, cervical funneling dynamic shortening preterm birth risk, cervical length less than 25mm preterm birth sensitivity specificity, Owen cervical sonography preterm birth prediction, second trimester transvaginal ultrasound cervix preterm labor, receiver operating characteristic cervical length serial measurement, 16 to 24 weeks cervical assessment high risk women, blinded observational study cervical length spontaneous preterm birth
PMID 11560539 11560539 DOI 10.1001/jama.286.11.1340 10.1001/jama.286.11.1340

Cite this article

Owen, J., Yost, N., Berghella, V., Thom, E., Swain, M., Dildy, G. A., Miodovnik, M., Langer, O., Sibai, B., McNellis, D., National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, & Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units Network (2001). Mid-trimester endovaginal sonography in women at high risk for spontaneous preterm birth. *JAMA*, *286*(11), 1340-1348. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.286.11.1340

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