Progesterone and preterm delivery--deja vu all over again

The New England journal of medicine, 348(24), 2453-2455

DOI 10.1056/NEJMe030081 PMID 12802032 Source

Abstract

It has become almost a platitude to lament the complexity and intractability of the problem of preterm delivery, the poor predictive value of screening tests for its occurrence, its resistance to attempted interventions, and its increasing rate.1 Preterm delivery is more common among blacks, the poor, the unmarried, cigarette smokers, underweight women, women with multiple gestations, women with uterine anomalies, women with a history of previous preterm delivery, and women without prenatal care. Although the perinatal mortality rate due to prematurity has decreased dramatically during the past three decades, this reduction has resulted from improvements in perinatal and pediatric care . . .

Topics

progesterone preterm delivery prevention, 17 hydroxyprogesterone caproate preterm birth, progesterone supplementation pregnancy outcomes, preterm labor progesterone support, progesterone injections preterm birth risk, preterm delivery prevention strategies, progesterone therapy high risk pregnancy, preterm birth risk factors progesterone, hydroxyprogesterone caproate efficacy, progesterone perinatal mortality, obstetric progesterone protocols

Cite this article

Greene, M. F. (2003). Progesterone and preterm delivery--deja vu all over again. *The New England journal of medicine*, *348*(24), 2453-2455. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMe030081

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