ABSTRACT
This study considers whether admission to the hospital of a patient diagnosed with
a short cervix delayed delivery, prevented preterm delivery, and/or decreased the
rate of change in the cervical length (CL) on follow-up measurements. The design was
a retrospective cohort study of women carrying singleton pregnancies with cervical
lengths ≤ 25 mm at gestational ages 16 to 28 weeks managed expectantly from July 2002
through July 2005. Eighty-two patients met criteria for inclusion, 26 (32%) of whom
were hospitalized. On univariate analysis, hospitalization correlated with delivery
< 34 weeks (p = 0.027), an earlier gestational age (GA) at delivery (p = 0.046), and a shorter time from diagnosis to delivery (p < .001). Multivariate regression analysis of significant factors (age, prior preterm
births, initial CL, GA at diagnosis, and hospitalization) showed a correlation between
hospitalization and increased rate of cervical shortening (p = 0.005), and a trend toward hospitalization as an independent risk factor for delivery
less than 34 weeks (p = 0.066), an earlier GA at delivery (p = 0.058), and a shorter time from diagnosis to delivery (p = 0.078). There also was no benefit seen from hospitalization when the initial CL
was < 15 mm, although we were underpowered for this analysis. Admission to the hospital
was not associated with a decreased rate of preterm delivery and there was a trend
toward hospitalization as an independent risk factor for delivery at < 34 weeks, an
earlier GA at delivery, and a shorter time from diagnosis to delivery. Hospitalization
was independently associated with an increased rate of cervical shortening.
KEYWORDS
Cervical length - cervical insufficiency - preterm birth - hospitalization
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Nathan S FoxM.D.
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