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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| ZonMw: The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development | OTHER |
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Conventional cardiotocography (CTG) has been used extensively for more than 50 years to monitor the fetal condition during labour, but since the rate of operative deliveries keeps rising, its ability to improve neonatal outcomes is unsatisfactory. A transabdominal non-invasive and wireless alternative which overcomes the shortcomings of conventional methods is electrophysiological CTG (eCTG) monitoring. In eCTG the fetal heart rate (FHR) is measured by fetal electrocardiography (NI-fECG) and uterine activity (UA) by electrohysterography (EHG). Both NI-fECG and EHG have been proven more accurate and reliable than conventional non-invasive methods and are less affected by maternal body mass index (BMI).
This study aims to evaluate the mode of delivery, maternal and perinatal outcomes, costs and patient and healthcare professionals perspectives on eCTG monitoring versus the conventional CTG during labour at term with a singleton fetus in cephalic position.
The eCTG provides a more accurate assessment of the fetus and the UA, compared to the conventional CTG. This allows for optimization of the contraction pattern during high-risk deliveries. We hypothesize that this will reduce the number of operative interventions and improves perinatal outcome. There are three reasons why an improvement in the contraction pattern by the eCTG can influence our outcomes:
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| eCTG monitoring | Active Comparator | eCTG monitoring with the Nemo Fetal Monitoring System (Nemo Healthcare B.V., Veldhoven, the Netherlands). The NFMS consists of a wireless and beltless electrode patch on the maternal abdomen. It monitors fetal heart rate by fetal electrocardiography, maternal heart rate by maternal electrocardiography and the electrical activity of the uterine muscle by electrohysterography. The advantage of the NFMS is that it is a safe method that can be used in all situations that are contraindicated for invasive monitoring. Furthermore, it can be used when the membranes are not ruptured and the patch does not have to be repetitively repositioned during labor. Because the NFMS is wireless, it gives women more freedom of movement during labor. |
|
| Conventional CTG monitoring | No Intervention | Philips Avalon FM 30 (Philips Healthcare, Eindhoven, the Netherlands). The fetal heart rate is measured non-invasively by doppler ultrasound or invasively by fetal scalp electrode. The uterine activity and maternal heart rate is measured by tocodynamometry. |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| eCTG monitoring with the NFMS | Device | Device: Nemo Fetal Monitoring System (Nemo Healthcare B.V., Veldhoven, the Netherlands) |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| The number of operative interventions during labor | cesarean section or instrumental vaginal delivery | During delivery |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Duration of the first stage of labor in minutes | 0-10 cm dilation during labor | |
| Duration of the second stage of labor in minutes | Start pushing until childbirth | |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maxima MC | Recruiting | Veldhoven | North Brabant | 5504 DB | Netherlands |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40701589 | Derived | Berben PBQ, de Klerk ND, van der Ven M, Fransen AF, Niemarkt HJ, van den Heuvel ER, van der Hout-van der Jagt MB, Oei SG, van Laar JOEH. Non-invasive electrophysiological monitoring vs conventional monitoring during labour in a tertiary obstetric care centre in the Netherlands: study protocol of a cohort intervention random sampling study (NIEM-II study). BMJ Open. 2025 Jul 22;15(7):e102901. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-102901. |
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All IPD that underlie results in a publication
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Eligible women will be prospectively included in the cohort receiving conventional CTG monitoring. From the eligible women in the prospective cohort a random sample (90.9%) will be offered eCTG monitoring via a computer generated random collection. Participants will receive eCTG monitoring from the start of fetal monitoring during labour until 1.5 hour after delivery. A retrospective cohort of 2100 women who received conventional CTG monitoring between April 2019 and February 2023 will be added to the prospective cohort for statistical analysis.
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| The timing and reason of operative interventions during labor |
Timing is defined as:
|
| During delivery |
| The number of participants with analgesia for pain reduction: epidural or/and remifentanil | During delivery |
| Perineal laceration (grade 1, 2, 3a, 3b, 3c, 4) | Directly after childbirth |
| The number of participants with a mediolateral episiotomy and reason for the episiotomy | Directly after childbirth |
| Number (percentage) and result of fetal blood sampling during the primary and secondary stages of labour | During delivery |
| Perinatal mortality | Perinatal mortality is defined as the number of fetal deaths past 22 completed weeks (154 days) of gestation plus the number of deaths among live-born children up to seven completed days of life | During pregnancy up to seven completed days of life |
| Neonatal mortality | Neonatal mortality is defined as the number of neonatal deaths after the seventh day but before the 28th day of life | After the seventh day but before the 28th day of life |
| The number of neonates with hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| The number of neonates with Neonatal Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS) | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| The number of neonates with Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS) | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| The number of neonates with convulsions | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| The number of neonates with Clinical early onset sepsis | Clinical early onset is defined as clinical sepsis within the first 72 hours after birth with > 3 days of antibiotics | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| The number of neonates with Confirmed early onset sepsis | Confirmed early onset sepsis is defined as positive cultures of blood, cerebrospinal fluid, or urine from the first 72 hours after birth | childbirth - 72 hours after childbirth |
| The number of neonates with admission to Neonatal Intensive Care Unit | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| Length of Admission to Neonatal Intensive Care Unit | In days | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| Reason for the admission to Neonatal Intensive Care Unit | childbirth - 28th day postpartum |
| The number of neonates with the need for mechanical ventilation | The number of neonates with the need for mechanical ventilation within the first 72 hours after birth | childbirth - 72 hours after childbirth |
| The number of neonates with a 5 minute Apgar score <7 | 5 minutes after childbirth |
| The number of neonates with a neonatal acidosis at birth | It is defined as cord artery pH < 7.05 and base deficit > 12 mmol/L directly after birth. The definition is set as pH < 7.10 and base deficit > 12 mmol/L in cases with only an umbilical vein sample (one available blood gas sample or the pH difference between two samples below 0.03) | Directly after childbirth |
| Maternal mortality | Maternal mortality or 'pregnancy-related death' is defined as death from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management (excluding accidental or incidental causes) during pregnancy and childbirth or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and site of the pregnancy | During pregnancy and childbirth or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy |
| The number of mothers admitted to the Intensive Care Unit | childbirth until six weeks postpartum |
| The number of mothers with a thromboembolic event | childbirth until six weeks postpartum |
| The number of mothers with an uterine rupture | childbirth until six weeks postpartum |
| The number of mothers with an obstetric haemorrhage | Obstetric haemorrhage > 1000 millilitres within 24 hours after giving birth | childbirth until 24 hours after childbirth |
| The number of mothers with a postpartum anemia due to postpartum haemorrhage with requires red cell transfusion | childbirth until six weeks postpartum |
| The number of mothers with a suspected or confirmed postpartum infection requiring antibiotics | i.e. chorioamnionitis, endometritis, wound infection and/or urinary tract infection. | childbirth until six weeks postpartum |
| Patient satisfaction by questionnaires | Validated Birth-Satisfaction-Scale-Revised questionnaire and a non-validated questionnaire. | 2-6 hours after childbirth |
| Professional satisfaction by questionnaire | Non-validated questionnaire | 1 year after the start of the study |
| Costs as a business case model until six weeks postpartum | Delivery until six weeks postpartum |
| For eCTG monitoring: amount of signal loss in percentage of total duration during labour | The amount of signal loss will be calculated based on the CTG. Signal loss is defined as minutes without registration of the fetal heart rate | During delivery |
| For eCTG monitoring: frequency of switch from Nemo Fetal Monitoring System to conventional CTG + reason, timing and success percentage of the switch | During delivery |
| For eCTG monitoring: EHG pattern within the first 1.5 hours postpartum and the possible association with the amount of bloodloss, medication use and time to placental expulsion | First 1.5 hours postpartum |
| For eCTG monitoring: EHG pattern before and after labour analgesia and the possible association of EHG pattern with labour analgesia | During delivery |