posted on 2021-06-18, 10:59authored byElsa Lorthe, Carla Moreira, Tom Weber, Lene D Huusom, Stephan Schmidt, Rolf F Maier, Pierre-Henri Jarreau, Marina Cuttini, Elizabeth S Draper, Jennifer Zeitlin, Henrique Barros
After preterm premature rupture of membranes (PPROM), antibiotics and antenatal steroids are effective evidence-based interventions, but the use of tocolysis is controversial. We investigated whether a unit policy of tocolysis use after PPROM is associated with prolonged gestation and improved outcomes for very preterm infants in units that systematically use these other evidence-based treatments. From the prospective, observational, population-based EPICE cohort study (all very preterm births in 19 regions from 11 European countries, 2011–2012), we included 607 women with a singleton pregnancy and PPROM at 24–29 weeks’ gestation, of whom 101, 195 and 311 were respectively managed in 17, 32 and 45 units with no-use, restricted and liberal tocolysis policies for PPROM. The association between unit policies and outcomes (early-onset sepsis, survival at discharge, survival at discharge without severe morbidity and survival at two years without gross motor impairment) was investigated using three-level random-intercept logistic regression models, showing no differences in neonatal or two-year outcomes by unit policy. Moreover, there was no association between unit policies and prolongation of gestation in a multilevel survival analysis. Compared to a unit policy of no-use of tocolysis after PPROM, a liberal or restricted policy is not associated with improved obstetric, neonatal or two-year outcomes.
Funding
The research leading to these results received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013) under grant agreement n°259882. Additional funding is acknowledged from the following regions: France (French Institute of Public Health Research/Institute of Public Health and its partners the French Health Ministry, the National Institute of Health and Medical Research, the National Institute of Cancer, and the National Solidarity Fund for Autonomy; grant ANR-11-EQPX-0038 from the National Research Agency through the French Equipex Program of Investments in the Future; and the PremUp Foundation); Poland (2012–2015 allocation of funds for international projects from the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education); Sweden (Stockholm County Council [ALF-project and Clinical Research Appointment] and by the Department of Neonatal Medicine, Karolinska University Hospital), UK (funding for The Neonatal Survey from Neonatal Networks for East Midlands and Yorkshire and Humber regions). EL is fully supported by funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program RECAP preterm Project (grant no. 733280).
History
Citation
Lorthe, E., Moreira, C., Weber, T. et al. Unit policies regarding tocolysis after preterm premature rupture of membranes: association with latency, neonatal and 2-year outcomes (EPICE cohort). Sci Rep 10, 9535 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-65201-y