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Study was terminated early do to a business decision by sponsor and lack of ability to recruit the needed number of participants.
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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Obstetrix Medical Group | INDUSTRY |
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The purpose of this study is to perform a large multi-center randomized trial comparing the role of vaginal pessary versus expectant management in women with placenta previa between 22w0d and 32w0d of gestation in prolonging gestation until ≥36 weeks. Secondary outcomes will assess duration of antepartum admission, total blood loss, gestational age at delivery, type of cesarean delivery, and a composite neonatal outcome. The hypothesis is that the use of a vaginal pessary in patients presenting with placenta previa between 22-32 weeks will decrease delivery prior to 36 weeks as compared to expectantly managing these patients.
While the use of pessary in this scenario has not been previously assessed, it is reasonable to infer, from the data for use of pessary to prevent preterm birth, and the data regarding the efficacy of cervical cerclage in reducing bleeding and preterm birth in patients with placenta previa to this clinical conundrum. If cerclage improves pregnancy outcomes in patients with placenta previa, the use of a vaginal pessary should be a less-invasive but similarly efficacious alternative to maintain cervical length. The purpose of this study is to compare two treatment options reasonably used in clinical practice. Use of cervical pessary is not expected to increase antenatal costs beyond the minimal cost of the pessary. Additionally, given the results of the available clinical trials on cerclage maintaining cervical length and decreasing bleeding, this procedure has the potential to decrease the cost of both antepartum admissions for bleeding and neonatal care.
A substantial number of women with placenta previa will not hemorrhage until they reach the third trimester, thus, by allowing for enrollment and pessary placement as late as 32w0d, the intervention may be applied to the broadest "at risk" population. As previously mentioned literature on the use of cerclage in patients with placenta previa and short cervix are limited by a reduced number of eligible subjects and concern over safety issues has not been assuaged by these small studies. As pessary placement appears to carry little if any risk based on a number of published studies, eligibility can be expanded to any cervical length.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cervical Pessary Placement | Experimental | For the patients assigned to receive a cervical pessary, they will be evaluated and fitted for a pessary by the physician within 3-4 days unless exclusion criteria develop. After it is placed she will be evaluated for comfort. She will be asked to leave it in at all times but informed that removal and withdrawal from the study is always her option. |
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| Expectant Managment | No Intervention | Each participant will have standard care for placenta previa. This is the same care that a patient with a placenta previa would ordinarily receive even if she were not participating in the trial. The trial's participating investigators agree that the management outlined in this section is standard management for placenta previa. |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cervical Pessary Placement | Procedure | For the patients assigned to receive a cervical pessary, they will be evaluated and fitted for a pessary by the physician within 3-4 days unless exclusion criteria develop. After it is placed she will be evaluated for comfort. She will be asked to leave it in at all times but informed that removal and withdrawal from the study is always her option. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Decrease Delivery Prior to 36 weeks in patients with a gestational age of 22.0- 32.0 presenting with placenta previa. | This outcome, a decrease in the number of delivery that occur before 36 weeks of pregnancy who have a diagnosed placenta previa. The gestational age is noted at the time of birth. | day of birth |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Need for packed red blood cells or hematologic product replacement | note the number of blood transfusions the baby received from birth until 60 days post birth | from birth to 60 days |
| Neonate or Fetal Death |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Thomas Garite, MD | Obstetrix Medical Group | Principal Investigator |
| Irene Stafford, MD | Baylor College of Medicine | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of South Alabama Medical Center | Mobile | Alabama | 36617 | United States | ||
| Long Beach Memorial Medical Center |
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| Label | URL |
|---|---|
| Sponsors Website | View source |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D010923 | Placenta Previa |
| D047928 | Premature Birth |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D007744 | Obstetric Labor Complications |
| D011248 | Pregnancy Complications |
| D005261 | Female Urogenital Diseases and Pregnancy Complications |
| D000091642 | Urogenital Diseases |
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There is no masking in this study.
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death of fetus or newborn up to 60 days post delivery
| From time of trial entry to 60 days post birth (approximately 34 weeks) |
| Neonatal Outcomes | Including birthweight, neonatal death, composite neonatal morbidity (any of the following: respiratory distress syndrome, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, severe intraventricular hemorrhage, periventricular leukomalacia, proven sepsis, necrotizing enterocolitis, or perinatal death.) and specific neonatal morbidities including: Apgar <3 at 5 min, ICU admission, , cord pH, 7.1. | From Birth to 60 days of Age |
| Any adverse reactions to the cervical pessary. | unexpected adverse reaction such as cervical trauma, infection, allergy | from 0 to as many as 18 weeks. |
| Long Beach |
| California |
| 90801-1428 |
| United States |
| Good Samaritan Hospital | San Jose | California | 95008 | United States |
| Presbyterian/St Luke's Hospital | Denver | Colorado | 80218 | United States |
| Denver Health and Hospital Authority | Denver | Colorado | 95008 | United States |
| Norton Kosair Children's Hospital | Louisville | Kentucky | 40202 | United States |
| Tulane - Lakeside Hospital for Women and Children | Metairie | Louisiana | 70001 | United States |
| Touro Infirmary | New Orleans | Louisiana | 70115 | United States |
| Baylor/Texas Children's Hospital & Pavilion | Houston | Texas | 77030 | United States |
| Swedish Medical Center | Seattle | Washington | 98122-4307 | United States |
| D010922 | Placenta Diseases |
| D007752 | Obstetric Labor, Premature |