Intrauterine Contraction Monitoring in Chorioamnionitis: A Secondary, Blinded Analysis of a Randomised Controlled Trial Cohort
Intrauterine Contraction Monitoring in Chorioamnionitis: A Secondary, Blinded Analysis of a Randomised Controlled Trial Cohort

Intrauterine Contraction Monitoring in Chorioamnionitis: A Secondary, Blinded Analysis of a Randomised Controlled Trial Cohort

BJOG. 2025 Jan 16. doi: 10.1111/1471-0528.18076. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To study the effects of chorioamnionitis on uterine activity and to investigate associations between external and intrauterine monitoring methods and neonatal outcomes.

DESIGN: Secondary analysis of a randomised controlled trial cohort.

SETTING: Two labour wards, in a university tertiary hospital and a central hospital.

POPULATION: Parturients with singleton pregnancies, gestational age ≥ 37 weeks and fetus in cephalic position. Clinical chorioamnionitis developed in 8.6% of cases (n = 130/1504).

METHODS: Analyses of uterine activity (contractions/10 min or intrauterine pressure in Montevideo units) during the 4 h before birth adjusted for maternal characteristics and intrapartum factors.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Uterine activity with or without chorioamnionitis and the intervention of external versus intrauterine monitoring in relation to fetal distress (admission to neonatal intensive care with umbilical artery pH ≤ 7.10 or 5-min Apgar score < 7), stratified by chorioamnionitis status.

RESULTS: Uterine contraction frequency/10 min decreased in labours with chorioamnionitis during the final hour preceding birth (4.2 [SD 1.1] vs. 3.9 [SD 1.2], adjusted regression coefficient -0.383, 95% CI -0.654 to -0.112, p = 0.006) compared to non-infected labors. In chorioamnionitis cases, mean frequency/10 min during last 4 h was higher with external versus intrauterine monitoring (4.2 [SD 0.8] vs. 3.8 [SD 0.9], MD 0.39, 95% CI 0.02-0.76, p = 0.038), and the intrauterine monitoring group had a lower incidence of fetal distress (6.7% vs. 23.1%, OR 0.24, 95% CI 0.07-0.79, p = 0.013).

CONCLUSIONS: Chorioamnionitis impairs uterine activity. Intrauterine monitoring may provide more accurate contraction analysis than external tocodynamometry and help reduce fetal compromise during labours complicated by chorioamnionitis.

PMID:39815803 | DOI:10.1111/1471-0528.18076