Expectant, medical, or surgical management of first-trimester miscarriage: a meta-analysis.
نویسندگان
چکیده
OBJECTIVE To quantify the relative benefits and harms of different management options for first-trimester miscarriage. DATA SOURCES MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane Controlled Trials Register searches (1966 to July 2004), including references of retrieved articles. METHODS OF STUDY SELECTION Randomized trials assigning women with first-trimester missed or incomplete miscarriage to surgical, medical, or expectant management were included. Primary outcomes were successful treatment and patient satisfaction. Secondary outcomes included moderate or severe bleeding, blood transfusion, emergency curettage, pelvic inflammatory disease, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Comparisons used the risk difference. Between-study heterogeneity and random effects summary estimates were calculated. TABULATION, INTEGRATION, AND RESULTS Complete evacuation of the uterus was significantly more common with surgical than medical management (risk difference 32.8%, number needed to treat 3, success rate of medical management 62%) and with medical than expectant management (risk difference 49.7%, number needed to treat 2). Success rate with expectant management was spuriously low (39%) in the latter comparison. Analysis of cases with incomplete miscarriage only showed that medical management still had two thirds the chance to induce complete evacuation compared with surgical management, but it was better than expectant management. Data from studies that evaluated outcome at 48 hours or more after allocation indicated again that medical management had a better success rate than expectant management but a worse success rate than surgical management; expectant management probably had much lower success rates than surgical evacuation, but data were very sparse. Patient satisfaction data were sparse. Moderate or severe bleeding was less common with medical than expectant management (risk difference 3.2%) and possibly surgical management (risk difference 2.1%). There was a considerable amount of missing information, in particular for secondary outcomes. CONCLUSION One additional success can be achieved among 3 women treated surgically rather than medically. Expectant management has had remarkably variable success rates across these studies, depending probably on the type of miscarriage. Greater standardization of outcomes should be a goal of future research.
منابع مشابه
Management of miscarriage: expectant, medical, or surgical? Results of randomised controlled trial (miscarriage treatment (MIST) trial).
OBJECTIVE To ascertain whether a clinically important difference exists in the incidence of gynaecological infection between surgical management and expectant or medical management of miscarriage. DESIGN Randomised controlled trial comparing medical and expectant management with surgical management of first trimester miscarriage. SETTING Early pregnancy assessment units of seven hospitals i...
متن کاملA qualitative study on patients' perceptions of expectant management of first trimester incomplete miscarriage.
INTRODUCTION Efficacy and safety of expectant management of first trimester miscarriage are well known, though the patients' perceptions and attitudes are less clear. This study was designed to understand the women's perception of symptoms, acceptability, fertility wishes and care received. METHODS A qualitative study among 25 women who were allocated to the expectant management arm of a rand...
متن کاملOutcome of expectant management of spontaneous first trimester miscarriage: observational study.
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the uptake and outcome of expectant management of spontaneous first trimester miscarriage in an early pregnancy assessment unit. PARTICIPANTS 1096 consecutive patients with a diagnosis of spontaneous first trimester miscarriage. METHODS Each miscarriage was classified as complete, incomplete, missed, or anembryonic on the basis of ultrasonography. Women who needed tre...
متن کاملExpectant or surgical management of miscarriage: a qualitative study.
OBJECTIVE To explore women's reasons for selecting either expectant or surgical management of first trimester miscarriage and to examine the impact of treatment upon them. DESIGN A qualitative study using interviews. SETTING The Early Pregnancy and Gynaecology Assessment Unit at a London hospital. SAMPLE Thirteen women diagnosed as having a first trimester miscarriage who had opted for ei...
متن کاملSurgical versus expectant management in women with an incomplete evacuation of the uterus after treatment with misoprostol for miscarriage: the MisoREST trial
BACKGROUND Medical treatment with misoprostol is a non-invasive and inexpensive treatment option in first trimester miscarriage. However, about 30% of women treated with misoprostol have incomplete evacuation of the uterus. Despite being relatively asymptomatic in most cases, this finding often leads to additional surgical treatment (curettage). A comparison of effectiveness and cost-effectiven...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Obstetrics and gynecology
دوره 105 5 Pt 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005