1. Randomized control trial comparing hygroscopic cervical dilators to cervical ripening balloon for outpatient cervical ripening.
- Author
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Lu AMR, Lin B, Shahani D, Demertzis K, Muscat J, Zabel E, Olson P, Manayan O, Nonnamaker E, Fest J, and McCue B
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Adult, Cesarean Section methods, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Patient Satisfaction, Dilatation methods, Dilatation instrumentation, Ambulatory Care methods, Outpatients statistics & numerical data, Cervical Ripening drug effects, Labor, Induced methods
- Abstract
Background: Outpatient term preinduction cervical ripening with mechanical agents has been associated with reduced length of stay, decreased cesarean delivery rates, low maternal and neonatal complications, and increased incidence of vaginal delivery within 24 hours., Objective: This study aimed to demonstrate equivalent efficacy between synthetic hygroscopic dilators and the single-balloon catheter for outpatient cervical ripening., Study Design: This randomized control equivalence trial compared synthetic hygroscopic dilators with the 30-mL silicone single-balloon catheter in primiparous and multiparous patients undergoing labor induction. The primary outcome was time from admission to delivery, with a prespecified 3-hour margin of equivalence. The secondary objectives were patient outcomes and perspectives., Results: Between March 1, 2019, and May 31, 2021, 1605 patients met the screening criteria, and 174 patients completed the study. The mean admission-to-delivery time was equivalent at 18.01 hours for the dilator group vs 17.55 hours for the balloon group (P=.04). The cesarean delivery rate of primiparous patients was similar at 28.1% with dilators vs 29.7% with the balloon. The groups had similar median cervical dilation and pain scores on insertion and admission. Overall patient satisfaction was high, 92.8% with dilators vs 96.2% with the balloon. The balloon group had significantly higher rates of early admission and device expulsion., Conclusion: Although the enrollment goal was not met, our study suggests that synthetic hygroscopic dilators and the single-balloon catheter for outpatient cervical ripening are both efficacious with similar time from admission to delivery, pain scores, and patient satisfaction with the procedure., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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