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Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries
BACKGROUND: Escalation in the global rates of labour interventions, particularly cesarean section and oxytocin augmentation, has renewed interest in a better understanding of natural labour progression. Methodological advancements in statistical and computational techniques addressing the limitation...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Public Library of Science
2018
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5770022/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29338000 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002492 |
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author | Oladapo, Olufemi T. Souza, Joao Paulo Fawole, Bukola Mugerwa, Kidza Perdoná, Gleici Alves, Domingos Souza, Hayala Reis, Rodrigo Oliveira-Ciabati, Livia Maiorano, Alexandre Akintan, Adesina Alu, Francis E. Oyeneyin, Lawal Adebayo, Amos Byamugisha, Josaphat Nakalembe, Miriam Idris, Hadiza A. Okike, Ola Althabe, Fernando Hundley, Vanora Donnay, France Pattinson, Robert Sanghvi, Harshadkumar C. Jardine, Jen E. Tunçalp, Özge Vogel, Joshua P. Stanton, Mary Ellen Bohren, Meghan Zhang, Jun Lavender, Tina Liljestrand, Jerker ten Hoope-Bender, Petra Mathai, Matthews Bahl, Rajiv Gülmezoglu, A. Metin |
author_facet | Oladapo, Olufemi T. Souza, Joao Paulo Fawole, Bukola Mugerwa, Kidza Perdoná, Gleici Alves, Domingos Souza, Hayala Reis, Rodrigo Oliveira-Ciabati, Livia Maiorano, Alexandre Akintan, Adesina Alu, Francis E. Oyeneyin, Lawal Adebayo, Amos Byamugisha, Josaphat Nakalembe, Miriam Idris, Hadiza A. Okike, Ola Althabe, Fernando Hundley, Vanora Donnay, France Pattinson, Robert Sanghvi, Harshadkumar C. Jardine, Jen E. Tunçalp, Özge Vogel, Joshua P. Stanton, Mary Ellen Bohren, Meghan Zhang, Jun Lavender, Tina Liljestrand, Jerker ten Hoope-Bender, Petra Mathai, Matthews Bahl, Rajiv Gülmezoglu, A. Metin |
author_sort | Oladapo, Olufemi T. |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Escalation in the global rates of labour interventions, particularly cesarean section and oxytocin augmentation, has renewed interest in a better understanding of natural labour progression. Methodological advancements in statistical and computational techniques addressing the limitations of pioneer studies have led to novel findings and triggered a re-evaluation of current labour practices. As part of the World Health Organization's Better Outcomes in Labour Difficulty (BOLD) project, which aimed to develop a new labour monitoring-to-action tool, we examined the patterns of labour progression as depicted by cervical dilatation over time in a cohort of women in Nigeria and Uganda who gave birth vaginally following a spontaneous labour onset. METHODS AND FINDINGS: This was a prospective, multicentre, cohort study of 5,606 women with singleton, vertex, term gestation who presented at ≤ 6 cm of cervical dilatation following a spontaneous labour onset that resulted in a vaginal birth with no adverse birth outcomes in 13 hospitals across Nigeria and Uganda. We independently applied survival analysis and multistate Markov models to estimate the duration of labour centimetre by centimetre until 10 cm and the cumulative duration of labour from the cervical dilatation at admission through 10 cm. Multistate Markov and nonlinear mixed models were separately used to construct average labour curves. All analyses were conducted according to three parity groups: parity = 0 (n = 2,166), parity = 1 (n = 1,488), and parity = 2+ (n = 1,952). We performed sensitivity analyses to assess the impact of oxytocin augmentation on labour progression by re-examining the progression patterns after excluding women with augmented labours. Labour was augmented with oxytocin in 40% of nulliparous and 28% of multiparous women. The median time to advance by 1 cm exceeded 1 hour until 5 cm was reached in both nulliparous and multiparous women. Based on a 95th percentile threshold, nulliparous women may take up to 7 hours to progress from 4 to 5 cm and over 3 hours to progress from 5 to 6 cm. Median cumulative duration of labour indicates that nulliparous women admitted at 4 cm, 5 cm, and 6 cm reached 10 cm within an expected time frame if the dilatation rate was ≥ 1 cm/hour, but their corresponding 95th percentiles show that labour could last up to 14, 11, and 9 hours, respectively. Substantial differences exist between actual plots of labour progression of individual women and the ‘average labour curves’ derived from study population-level data. Exclusion of women with augmented labours from the study population resulted in slightly faster labour progression patterns. CONCLUSIONS: Cervical dilatation during labour in the slowest-yet-normal women can progress more slowly than the widely accepted benchmark of 1 cm/hour, irrespective of parity. Interventions to expedite labour to conform to a cervical dilatation threshold of 1 cm/hour may be inappropriate, especially when applied before 5 cm in nulliparous and multiparous women. Averaged labour curves may not truly reflect the variability associated with labour progression, and their use for decision-making in labour management should be de-emphasized. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5770022 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2018 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-57700222018-01-23 Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries Oladapo, Olufemi T. Souza, Joao Paulo Fawole, Bukola Mugerwa, Kidza Perdoná, Gleici Alves, Domingos Souza, Hayala Reis, Rodrigo Oliveira-Ciabati, Livia Maiorano, Alexandre Akintan, Adesina Alu, Francis E. Oyeneyin, Lawal Adebayo, Amos Byamugisha, Josaphat Nakalembe, Miriam Idris, Hadiza A. Okike, Ola Althabe, Fernando Hundley, Vanora Donnay, France Pattinson, Robert Sanghvi, Harshadkumar C. Jardine, Jen E. Tunçalp, Özge Vogel, Joshua P. Stanton, Mary Ellen Bohren, Meghan Zhang, Jun Lavender, Tina Liljestrand, Jerker ten Hoope-Bender, Petra Mathai, Matthews Bahl, Rajiv Gülmezoglu, A. Metin PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: Escalation in the global rates of labour interventions, particularly cesarean section and oxytocin augmentation, has renewed interest in a better understanding of natural labour progression. Methodological advancements in statistical and computational techniques addressing the limitations of pioneer studies have led to novel findings and triggered a re-evaluation of current labour practices. As part of the World Health Organization's Better Outcomes in Labour Difficulty (BOLD) project, which aimed to develop a new labour monitoring-to-action tool, we examined the patterns of labour progression as depicted by cervical dilatation over time in a cohort of women in Nigeria and Uganda who gave birth vaginally following a spontaneous labour onset. METHODS AND FINDINGS: This was a prospective, multicentre, cohort study of 5,606 women with singleton, vertex, term gestation who presented at ≤ 6 cm of cervical dilatation following a spontaneous labour onset that resulted in a vaginal birth with no adverse birth outcomes in 13 hospitals across Nigeria and Uganda. We independently applied survival analysis and multistate Markov models to estimate the duration of labour centimetre by centimetre until 10 cm and the cumulative duration of labour from the cervical dilatation at admission through 10 cm. Multistate Markov and nonlinear mixed models were separately used to construct average labour curves. All analyses were conducted according to three parity groups: parity = 0 (n = 2,166), parity = 1 (n = 1,488), and parity = 2+ (n = 1,952). We performed sensitivity analyses to assess the impact of oxytocin augmentation on labour progression by re-examining the progression patterns after excluding women with augmented labours. Labour was augmented with oxytocin in 40% of nulliparous and 28% of multiparous women. The median time to advance by 1 cm exceeded 1 hour until 5 cm was reached in both nulliparous and multiparous women. Based on a 95th percentile threshold, nulliparous women may take up to 7 hours to progress from 4 to 5 cm and over 3 hours to progress from 5 to 6 cm. Median cumulative duration of labour indicates that nulliparous women admitted at 4 cm, 5 cm, and 6 cm reached 10 cm within an expected time frame if the dilatation rate was ≥ 1 cm/hour, but their corresponding 95th percentiles show that labour could last up to 14, 11, and 9 hours, respectively. Substantial differences exist between actual plots of labour progression of individual women and the ‘average labour curves’ derived from study population-level data. Exclusion of women with augmented labours from the study population resulted in slightly faster labour progression patterns. CONCLUSIONS: Cervical dilatation during labour in the slowest-yet-normal women can progress more slowly than the widely accepted benchmark of 1 cm/hour, irrespective of parity. Interventions to expedite labour to conform to a cervical dilatation threshold of 1 cm/hour may be inappropriate, especially when applied before 5 cm in nulliparous and multiparous women. Averaged labour curves may not truly reflect the variability associated with labour progression, and their use for decision-making in labour management should be de-emphasized. Public Library of Science 2018-01-16 /pmc/articles/PMC5770022/ /pubmed/29338000 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002492 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Oladapo, Olufemi T. Souza, Joao Paulo Fawole, Bukola Mugerwa, Kidza Perdoná, Gleici Alves, Domingos Souza, Hayala Reis, Rodrigo Oliveira-Ciabati, Livia Maiorano, Alexandre Akintan, Adesina Alu, Francis E. Oyeneyin, Lawal Adebayo, Amos Byamugisha, Josaphat Nakalembe, Miriam Idris, Hadiza A. Okike, Ola Althabe, Fernando Hundley, Vanora Donnay, France Pattinson, Robert Sanghvi, Harshadkumar C. Jardine, Jen E. Tunçalp, Özge Vogel, Joshua P. Stanton, Mary Ellen Bohren, Meghan Zhang, Jun Lavender, Tina Liljestrand, Jerker ten Hoope-Bender, Petra Mathai, Matthews Bahl, Rajiv Gülmezoglu, A. Metin Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries |
title | Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries |
title_full | Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries |
title_fullStr | Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries |
title_full_unstemmed | Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries |
title_short | Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: A prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries |
title_sort | progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour: a prospective cohort study in two sub-saharan african countries |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5770022/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29338000 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002492 |
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