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Babies in occiput posterior position are significantly more likely to require an emergency cesarean birth compared with babies in occiput transverse position in the second stage of labor: A prospective observational study.

Tempest, Nicola; Lane, Steven; Hapangama, Dharani; Collaborative in Obstetrics, UK Audit Ressearch Trainee; (UK-ARCOG), Gynecology; Parry-Smith, William

Authors

Nicola Tempest

Steven Lane

Dharani Hapangama

UK Audit Ressearch Trainee Collaborative in Obstetrics

Gynecology (UK-ARCOG)



Abstract

Introduction
Malposition complicates 2-13% of births at delivery, leading to increased obstetric interventions (cesarean section and instrumental delivery) and higher rates of adverse fetal and maternal outcomes. Limited data are available regarding the likely rates of obstetric intervention and subsequent neonatal and maternal outcomes of births with babies in persistent occiput posterior position vs those in persistent occiput transverse position. The UK Audit and Research trainee Collaborative in Obstetrics and Gynecology (UK-ARCOG) network set out to collect data prospectively at delivery on final mode of delivery and immediate outcomes.

Material and methods
The UK-ARCOG network collected data on all births with malposition of the fetal head complicating the second stage of labor (n = 838) (occiput posterior/occiput transverse) requiring rotational vaginal operative birth or emergency cesarean to expedite delivery across 66 participating UK National Health Service maternity units over a 1-month period. The outcomes considered were the need for emergency cesarean section without a trial of instrumental delivery, success of the first method of delivery employed in achieving a vaginal delivery and neonatal/maternal outcomes.

Results
Obstetricians regarded assistance with an operative vaginal delivery method to be unsafe in 15% of babies in occiput posterior position and 6.1% of babies in occiput transverse position, and they were delivered by primary emergency cesarean section. When vaginal delivery was deemed safe (defined as attempted assisted vaginal rotational delivery), the first instrument attempted was successful in 74.4% of occiput posterior babies and 79.3% of occiput transverse babies.

Conclusions
Our data facilitates decision making by obstetricians to increase safety of assisted rotational operative delivery of a malpositioned baby at initial assessment and in counseling women. Until data from a well-designed randomized controlled trial of instrumental delivery vs emergency cesarean section are available, this manuscript provides contemporaneous national data from a high resource setting within a structured training program, to assist the selection of an appropriate instrument/method for the delivery of a malpositioned baby.

Citation

Tempest, N., Lane, S., Hapangama, D., Collaborative in Obstetrics, U. A. R. T., (UK-ARCOG), G., & Parry-Smith, W. (2020). Babies in occiput posterior position are significantly more likely to require an emergency cesarean birth compared with babies in occiput transverse position in the second stage of labor: A prospective observational study. Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica, 99(4), 537-545. https://doi.org/10.1111/aogs.13765

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 28, 2019
Online Publication Date Oct 30, 2019
Publication Date 2020-04
Deposit Date Apr 23, 2024
Journal Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica
Print ISSN 0001-6349
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 99
Issue 4
Pages 537-545
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/aogs.13765
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/773552
PMID 31667835