Bijma HH, van der Heide A, Wildschut HIJ, van de Vathorst S, Tibboel D, Wladimiroff JW, van der Maas PJ. Survival after non-aggressive obstetric management in cases of severe fetal anomalies: a retrospective study.
BJOG 2005;
112:1630-5. [PMID:
16305566 DOI:
10.1111/j.1471-0528.2005.00777.x]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/26/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Obstetricians may choose to refrain from interventions aimed at sustaining fetal life (i.e., non-aggressive obstetric management) when the fetus has an extremely poor prognosis. However, if the infant is then born alive, crucial neonatal management decisions then have to be made. We sought empirical data concerning such perinatal end-of-life decisions. Firstly, to describe survival during delivery and after birth following non-aggressive obstetric management, and secondly, to describe neonatal management in infants born alive after non-aggressive obstetric management.
DESIGN
Retrospective descriptive study.
SETTING
Tertiary centre.
POPULATION
Eighty-one infants born to women who opted for a non-aggressive obstetric management policy because of sonographically diagnosed severe fetal anomaly.
METHODS
Data were collected from obstetric and neonatal records, as well as ultrasound reports.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Survival, neonatal management and health status after birth.
RESULTS
Relevant data were available for 78/80 (98%) infants. Six (8%) infants died in utero, 16 (21%) died during delivery (11 from cephalocentesis) and 56 (72%) were born alive. Life-sustaining neonatal treatment was initiated in 29 (52%) of the live-born infants. Twenty-three of these 29 (79%) infants died within six months of birth. Of the 27 live-born infants who did not receive neonatal life-sustaining treatment, 25 (93%) died. Eight infants survived; all with severe health problems.
CONCLUSION
Life-sustaining neonatal support after non-aggressive obstetric management in the presence of severe fetal malformation has little impact on survival.
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