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Feasibility of Conducting a Trial Assessing Benefits and Risks of Planned Caesarean Section Versus Planned Vaginal Birth: A Cross-Sectional Study

Authors :
Fernando Althabe
Nicole Minckas
Gabriela Cormick
Veronica Pingray
José M. Belizán
Julio D Malamud
Melissa Amyx
Julie Rivo
María Belizán
Gerardo T Murga
A.E. Fiorillo
Roberto A Casale
Luz Gibbons
Source :
Matern Child Health J
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Though interest is growing for trials comparing planned delivery mode (vaginal delivery [VD]; cesarean section [CS]) in low-risk nulliparous women, appropriate study design is unclear. Our objective was to assess feasibility of three designs (preference trial [PCT], randomized controlled trial [RCT], partially randomized patient preference trial [PRPPT]) for a trial comparing planned delivery mode in low-risk women. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey of low-risk, nulliparous pregnant women (N=416) and healthcare providers (N=168) providing prenatal care and/or labor/delivery services was conducted in Argentina (2 public, 2 private hospitals). Proportion of pregnant women and providers willing to participate in each design and reasons for not participating were determined. RESULTS: Few women (85%). Believing randomization unacceptable (RCT, PRPPT) and desiring choice of delivery mode (RCT) were women’s reasons for not participating. For providers, commonly cited reasons for not participating included unacceptability of performing CS without medical indication, difficulty obtaining informed consent, discomfort enrolling patients (all designs), and violating women’s right to choose (RCT). CONCLUSIONS FOR PRACTICE: Important limitations were found for each trial design evaluated. The necessity of stronger evidence regarding delivery mode in low-risk women suggests consideration of additional designs, such as a rigorously designed cohort study or an RCT within an obstetric population with equivocal CS indications.

Details

ISSN :
15736628 and 10927875
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Maternal and Child Health Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bda22963d3d641364e9bfc29dbfb8bf2