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By mouth (per os) | PO |
Confidence interval | CI |
Fetal fibronectin | fFN |
Group B Streptococcus | GBS |
Herpes simplex virus | HSV |
Human immunodeficiency virus | HIV |
Insulin-like growth factor–binding protein 1 | IGFBP-1 |
Intramuscular | IM |
Intravenous | IV |
Intraventricular hemorrhage | IVH |
Lamellar body count | LBC |
Maternal-Fetal Medicine Unit | MFMU |
Matrix metalloproteinase | MMP |
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development | NICHD |
Neonatal intensive care unit | NICU |
Odds ratio | OR |
Periventricular leukomalacia | PVL |
Phosphatidylglycerol | PG |
Placental α-microglobulin 1 | PAMG-1 |
Premature rupture of the membranes | PROM |
Respiratory distress syndrome | RDS |
Tissue inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinase | TIMP |
US Food and Drug Administration | FDA |
Membrane rupture that occurs spontaneously prior to the onset of labor is described as premature rupture of the membranes (PROM), regardless of the gestational age at which it occurs. PROM complicates approximately 8% to 10% of pregnancies overall. As with preterm labor and cervical insufficiency, preterm PROM before 37 weeks is considered a cause of spontaneous preterm birth. The relative contribution of PROM to prematurity appears to vary greatly among patient populations, affecting about 10% of preterm births in national databases but over 20% in certain high-risk populations. Its frequency appears to have declined during the past decade.
PROM, at any gestational age, is associated with brief latency (from membrane rupture to delivery), as well as increased risks for perinatal infection and umbilical cord compression (due to oligohydramnios). Because of these characteristics, term and preterm PROM are significant causes of perinatal morbidity and mortality. When PROM occurs at term, the risk of neonatal complications with delivery of a noninfected and nonasphyxiated infant is low. Clinical management should be directed toward delivery. Although complications can occur, delivery at 32 to 36 weeks’ gestation is generally associated with good infant outcomes, particularly if the fetus has documented pulmonary maturity. Given the risks of continued pregnancy and anticipated brief latency, delivery of the mature fetus is generally warranted, particularly at 34 weeks’ gestation or later. At 32 to 36 weeks’ gestation, the immature fetus may benefit from measures to accelerate fetal maturation and to prolong the pregnancy. With immediate delivery after preterm PROM at 23 to 31 weeks’ gestation, there is significant risk for newborn complications that can be reduced through adequate delay of delivery. In the absence of contraindications, management is directed toward continuing the pregnancy with attention to potential complications that include umbilical cord compression, intrauterine infection, and abruptio placentae. When PROM occurs before the limit of viability, newborn death is inevitable with immediate delivery. Although conservative management may still result in a previable delivery, some women will benefit from extended latency with delivery of a potentially viable infant. Since the causes of and outcomes after PROM vary with gestational age at membrane rupture, in different populations, and in geographic locations, no single approach to the management of PROM can be pursued and individual circumstances should be considered. Under all circumstances, the patient should be properly informed regarding the potential maternal, fetal, and newborn complications of PROM and preterm birth . These issues are discussed in detail in this chapter.
The fetus develops within the amniotic fluid, which is surrounded by the fetal membranes. These membranes consist of a thin amnion layer that lines the amniotic cavity and a thicker outer chorion directly apposed to the maternal decidua. The amnion fuses to the chorion near the end of the first trimester of pregnancy, and these layers are subsequently attached by a collagen-rich connective tissue zone. For the remainder of the pregnancy, the fetal membranes include a single cuboidal amnion epithelium with subjacent compact and spongy connective tissue layers, and a thicker chorion that consists of reticular and trophoblastic layers. Together, the amnion and chorion are stronger than either layer independently; individually, the amnion has greater tensile strength than the chorion.
As the pregnancy progresses, changes in collagen content and type, intercellular matrix, and cellular apoptosis result in structural weakening of the fetal membranes. Membrane remodeling, which is more evident near the internal cervical os, can be stimulated by thrombin-mediated increases in matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), decreased levels of tissue inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (TIMPs) within the membranes, and increased poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) cleavage. Contractions subject the amniochorionic membranes to additional physical strain that can lead to membrane rupture. Should the fetal membranes not rupture before labor, advancing cervical dilation decreases the work needed to cause membrane rupture over the internal cervical os. Preterm PROM likely results from a variety of factors that ultimately lead to accelerated membrane weakening. Some possible causes include: an increase in local cytokines, an imbalance in the interaction between MMPs and TIMPs, increased collagenase and protease activity, or other factors that result in increased intrauterine pressure (e.g., polyhydramnios).
A number of risk factors have been associated with the occurrence of preterm PROM. Among these are: low socioeconomic status, uterine overdistension, second- and third-trimester bleeding, low body mass index (BMI), nutritional deficiencies of copper and ascorbic acid, maternal cigarette smoking, cervical conization or cerclage, pulmonary disease in pregnancy, connective tissue disorders (e.g., Ehlers-Danlos syndrome), and preterm labor or symptomatic contractions in the current gestation. Each risk factor, individually or in concert, could lead to PROM through the mechanisms outlined above. However, the ultimate clinical cause of membrane rupture is often not apparent, and many at-risk patients will deliver at term without PROM.
Preterm PROM has also been linked to infections that involve the urogenital tract. Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Trichomonas vaginalis have each been associated with preterm PROM. Although vaginal group B β-hemolytic Streptococcus (GBS) colonization does not appear to be associated with preterm PROM, cervical colonization may be. GBS bacteriuria is associated with preterm PROM and low-birthweight infants. Although bacterial vaginosis has been linked to spontaneous preterm births, including preterm PROM, it is unclear whether bacterial vaginosis is the inciting condition that facilitates ascent of other bacteria to the upper genital tract, or whether it is simply a marker of maternal susceptibility to abnormal genital tract colonization. Bacterial invasion can facilitate membrane rupture through direct release of proteases and also through stimulation of a host inflammatory response that results in the elaboration of local cytokines, MMPs, and prostaglandins. Histologic studies of the membranes after preterm PROM often demonstrate significant bacterial contamination along the choriodecidual interface with minimal involvement of the amnion. Further evidence that links preterm PROM and genital tract infection is that these women have a high incidence of positive amniotic fluid cultures (25% to 35%), even in the absence of clinically suspected intrauterine infection. Although some of these findings may reflect ascending infection subsequent to membrane rupture, it is probable that ascending bacterial colonization and infection are integral to the pathogenesis of preterm PROM in many cases.
Although the onset of vaginal fluid leakage is an acute event, evidence shows that the factors and events that lead to membrane rupture can be subacute or even chronic. Women with a prior preterm birth (PTB), especially because of PROM, are at increased risk for PTB due to PROM in future pregnancies. Studies have also suggested associations exist between maternal inflammatory proteins, genotype, and spontaneous preterm birth (sPTB), due to preterm labor or PROM. Furthermore, asymptomatic women with short cervical lengths, in the second trimester, are at increased risk for preterm PROM, which can occur many weeks later.
Once preterm PROM occurs, delivery is often required or inevitable. Optimally, prevention of PROM would offer the best opportunity to avoid its complications. Both prior PTB, and especially prior preterm PROM, have been associated with preterm PROM in a subsequent pregnancy. The risk of recurrence for PTB increases with decreasing gestational age for the initial PTB. Those with a prior delivery near the limit of viability (23 to 27 weeks) have a 27.1% risk for subsequent PTB. Those with a prior history of PTB due to PROM have a 3.3-fold higher risk for PTB due to PROM (14% vs. 4.1%) and a 13.5-fold higher risk for PROM before 28 weeks’ gestation (1.8% vs. 0.13%) in a subsequent pregnancy ( P < .01 for each). In an analysis from a prospective evaluation of PTB prediction, nulliparas and women with prior deliveries were evaluated separately, since those without a prior birth lacked important historic information available to those with a prior term or preterm birth. In that study, multivariable analysis revealed medical complications (including pulmonary disease in pregnancy), work during pregnancy, recent symptomatic uterine contractions, and bacterial vaginosis to be significant markers for subsequent PTB in nulliparas when assessed at 22 to 24 weeks’ gestation ( Table 37.1 ). Among women with prior deliveries, prior PTB due to preterm labor or PROM and a positive cervicovaginal fetal fibronectin (fFN) screen were statistically significant clinical markers for subsequent preterm PROM, after controlling for other factors. Short cervical length (<25 mm), identified by transvaginal ultrasound, and low maternal BMI (<19.8 kg/m 2 ) were associated with an increased risk for subsequent PROM in both nulliparas and multiparas. Nulliparas with a positive cervicovaginal fFN and a short cervix had a 17% risk for PTB due to PROM. Multiparas with a prior PTB due to PROM, a short cervix on ultrasound, and positive cervicovaginal fFN screen had a 31-fold higher risk for PROM with delivery before 35 weeks’ gestation (25% vs. 2.3%) than women without those risk factors ( Table 37.2 ).
Nulliparas ( N = 1618) |
Multiparas ( N = 1711) |
|
---|---|---|
Medical complications | 3.7 (1.5–9.0) | — |
Work in pregnancy | 3.0 (1.5–6.1) | — |
Symptomatic contractions within 2 weeks | 2.2 (1.2–7.5) | — |
Bacterial vaginosis | 2.1 (1.1–4.1) | — |
Low BMI (<19.8 kg/m 2 ) | 2.0 (1.0–4.0) | 1.8 (1.1–3.0) |
Prior preterm birth due to PROM | — | 3.1 (1.8–5.4) |
Prior preterm birth due to preterm labor | — | 1.8 (1.1–3.1) |
Cervix <25 mm | 3.7 (1.8–7.7) | 2.5 (1.4–4.5) |
Positive fetal fibronectin | — | 2.1 (1.1–4.0) |
N | <37 Weeks (%) |
<35 Weeks (%) |
|
---|---|---|---|
All multiparas | 1711 | 5.0 | 2.3 |
No risk factors present | 1351 | 3.2 | 0.8 |
Prior preterm birth due to PROM only | 124 | 10.5 | 4.8 |
Prior preterm birth due to PROM and positive fFN a | 13 | 15.4 | 15.4 |
Prior preterm birth due to PROM and short cervix b | 26 | 23.1 | 15.4 |
All three risk factors present | 8 | 25.0 | 25.0 |
a Positive fFN, cervicovaginal fFN screen positive (>50 ng/mL) at 22 to 24 weeks’ gestation.
b Short cervix, cervix length <25 mm on transvaginal ultrasound at 22 to 24 weeks’ gestation.
Unfortunately, clinical risk-assessment systems identify only a small fraction of women who will ultimately deliver preterm. Although clinical and ancillary testing has increased our ability to identify women at increased risk from potentially modifiable factors—such as cigarette smoking, poor nutrition, urinary tract and sexually transmitted infections, pulmonary disease, and severe polyhydramnios—it is unknown whether modification of these in a given patient will reduce the risk for PROM. However, women at risk for PTB due to PROM, based on clinical findings, can be counseled regarding the symptoms of membrane rupture and contractions and can be encouraged to seek medical care should those symptoms occur. Regarding ancillary testing, progesterone therapy has been recommended for prevention of PTB in asymptomatic women with a short cervix, and thus cervical length (CL) screening has been both predictive and of therapeutic value. Alternatively, routine fFN screening has similar predictive value to CL measurement; however, no effective intervention can be offered based on the results of this testing. Thus, routine fFN testing after PTB due to PROM is not recommended. Current evidence supports both the use of 17-α-hydroxyprogesterone caproate (17-P) therapy for women with a prior PTB due to PROM or preterm labor and treatment with vaginal progesterone for asymptomatic women with short cervical lengths. Data regarding the value of vitamin C supplementation in preventing PROM are conflicting and are not generally supportive. In one study, such treatment was associated with a lower risk for sPTB (7.7% vs. 25%; P = .02). In contrast, secondary analysis of another study suggested that treatment with vitamin C and E did not reduce sPTB or late preterm birth due to PROM but was associated with less frequent PTB due to PROM before 32 weeks’ gestation. However, a review of studies in which vitamin C was given alone or in combination with other supplements suggests a negative impact on membrane strength and an increased risk for PTB. As a result of these conflicting findings, vitamin C supplementation to prevent preterm PROM is not recommended.
Brief latency from membrane rupture to delivery is one of the major hallmarks of PROM. On average, latency increases with decreasing gestational age at membrane rupture. At term, half of expectantly managed gravidas deliver within 33 hours, and 95% deliver within 94 to 107 hours of membrane rupture. Of all women with PROM before 34 weeks, 93% deliver in less than 1 week. After excluding those who require delivery soon after admission, 50% to 60% of those conservatively managed and treated with antibiotics for pregnancy prolongation will deliver within 1 week of membrane rupture. While only a small proportion of women with spontaneous membrane rupture (≤5%) can anticipate cessation of fluid leakage, about 86% of those with leakage after amniocentesis will reseal.
Chorioamnionitis is the most common maternal complication after preterm PROM. This risk increases as the duration of membrane rupture becomes more prolonged and decreases with advancing gestational age at PROM. The risks of chorioamnionitis and endometritis increase with decreasing gestational age at PROM and also in different patient populations (13% to 60% for chorioamnionitis and 2% to 13%, for endometritis). Abruptio placentae, which can cause PROM, may occur subsequent to membrane rupture and affects 4% to 12% of these pregnancies. Some uncommon but serious complications of PROM which are managed conservatively near the limit of viability include: retained placenta and hemorrhage requiring dilation and curettage (12%); maternal sepsis (0.8%); and maternal death (0.14%).
Fetal complications after membrane rupture can include infection, fetal distress due to umbilical cord compression or placental abruption. Frank or occult umbilical cord prolapse can also occur, particularly in cases of fetal malpresentation. Because of these factors, women with PROM have a higher risk for cesarean delivery for nonreassuring fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns than those in preterm labor with intact membranes (7.9% vs. 1.5%). In addition, fetal death complicates 1% to 2% of PROM cases that are conservatively managed .
The frequency and severity of newborn complications after PROM vary inversely with gestational age at membrane rupture and at delivery. Respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) is the most common serious newborn complication after PROM at any gestational age. Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH), and sepsis are common with early PTB; however, they are relatively uncommon when PROM and delivery occur near term. Serious perinatal morbidities with delivery before term can lead to long-term sequelae such as chronic lung disease (CLD), visual or hearing difficulties, intellectual disabilities, developmental and motor delay, cerebral palsy, and death. Although specific data are not available for those who deliver after preterm PROM, general community-based survival and morbidity data suggest that long-term morbidities and death are uncommon with delivery after about 32 weeks’ gestation. It is controversial whether gestational age-specific mortality is increased for preterm infants who deliver after preterm PROM.
Preterm PROM increases the risk of neonatal sepsis twofold over that seen after PTB due to preterm labor with intact membranes. Neonatal infection can result from the same organisms present in the amniotic fluid or from others, and it can present as acute congenital pneumonia, sepsis, or meningitis. Late-onset bacterial or fungal infections can also occur. Accumulating evidence suggests that fetal and newborn infections and inflammation are associated with an increased risk for long-term neurologic complications. Chorioamnionitis, which is more commonly seen after preterm PROM and is more likely with conservative management after membrane rupture, has been linked to the following sequelae: cerebral palsy, cystic periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), cognitive impairment, death, and neurodevelopmental impairment in extremely preterm infants. Elevated amniotic fluid cytokines and fetal systemic inflammation have also been associated with preterm PROM, PVL, and cerebral palsy. Although no data suggest that immediate delivery upon admission with PROM will avert these sequelae, these findings highlight the importance of restricting conservative management after PROM to circumstances in which there is the potential to reduce neonatal complications through either antenatal corticosteroid and/or magnesium sulfate administration, or extended pregnancy prolongation for fetal growth and maturation.
Pulmonary hypoplasia is a severe complication of oligohydramnios, which results from a lack of terminal bronchiole and alveolar development during the canalicular phase of pulmonary development in the second trimester . It is most accurately diagnosed pathologically using radial alveolar counts and lung weights. Clinical findings, such as a small chest circumference with severe respiratory distress and persistent pulmonary hypertension in the newborn, and radiographic findings—small, well-aerated lungs with a bell-shaped chest and elevation of the diaphragm—are also supportive of the diagnosis. Pulmonary hypoplasia, which develops over weeks after membrane rupture, can be caused by fluid efflux and tracheobronchial collapse after membrane rupture or through loss of intrinsic factors within the tracheobronchial fluid. Pulmonary hypoplasia complications, which occur in an average of about 6% of cases in series of midtrimester PROM, carry a 70% mortality rate. Its incidence is inversely correlated with gestational age at membrane rupture, and it complicates nearly 50% of cases with membrane rupture before 19 weeks and prolonged latency. The frequency of pulmonary hypoplasia can be as high as 74% to 82% with PROM at 15 to 16 weeks, persistent oligohydramnios, and a prolonged latency. Lethal pulmonary hypoplasia rarely occurs with PROM after 26 weeks’ gestation (0% to 1.4%) ; however, other pulmonary complications, such as pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum related to poor pulmonary compliance and high ventilatory pressures can occur with lesser degrees of this condition. Restriction deformities occur in about 1.5% of infants delivered after conservative management after midtrimester PROM but complicate up to 27% of fetuses with prolonged oligohydramnios.
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