Once More Unto the Breech: Planned Vaginal Delivery Compared With Planned Cesarean Delivery


Journal article


K. Joseph, T. Pressey, Janet Lyons, S. Bartholomew, Shiliang Liu, G. Muraca, R. Liston
Obstetrics and gynecology, 2015

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Joseph, K., Pressey, T., Lyons, J., Bartholomew, S., Liu, S., Muraca, G., & Liston, R. (2015). Once More Unto the Breech: Planned Vaginal Delivery Compared With Planned Cesarean Delivery. Obstetrics and Gynecology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Joseph, K., T. Pressey, Janet Lyons, S. Bartholomew, Shiliang Liu, G. Muraca, and R. Liston. “Once More Unto the Breech: Planned Vaginal Delivery Compared With Planned Cesarean Delivery.” Obstetrics and gynecology (2015).


MLA   Click to copy
Joseph, K., et al. “Once More Unto the Breech: Planned Vaginal Delivery Compared With Planned Cesarean Delivery.” Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2015.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{k2015a,
  title = {Once More Unto the Breech: Planned Vaginal Delivery Compared With Planned Cesarean Delivery},
  year = {2015},
  journal = {Obstetrics and gynecology},
  author = {Joseph, K. and Pressey, T. and Lyons, Janet and Bartholomew, S. and Liu, Shiliang and Muraca, G. and Liston, R.}
}

Abstract

This article provides a knowledge-based assessment of planned cesarean delivery compared with planned vaginal delivery for breech presentation at term gestation. The most critical evidence on this issue is the intention-to-treat analysis from the Term Breech Trial, which showed that planned cesarean delivery reduced composite perinatal death and serious neonatal morbidity. Although there was no difference in composite death or neurodevelopmental delay at 2 years of age, this finding was based on only 44% of randomized patients and was not an analysis by intention to treat. On the other hand, the design of the nonexperimental Presentation et Mode d'Accouchement: presentation and mode of delivery (PREMODA) study (which showed no difference in composite perinatal mortality or morbidity after planned cesarean delivery compared with planned vaginal delivery), likely favored the planned vaginal delivery group; lack of exclusion criteria led to higher risk women (with contraindications to vaginal delivery) being included in the planned cesarean delivery group. Such selection bias notwithstanding, both the Term Breech Trial and the PREMODA study showed significantly higher rates of 5-minute Apgar score less than 4, 5-minute Apgar score less than 7, intubation, and birth trauma in the planned vaginal delivery group. Finally, studies from the Netherlands, Denmark, and Canada have shown that increases in planned cesarean delivery after the Term Breech Trial led to improved neonatal outcomes. Nevertheless, planned vaginal delivery continues to be associated with higher rates of adverse perinatal outcomes in these countries. The totality of the evidence therefore unequivocally shows the relatively greater safety of planned cesarean delivery for breech presentation at term gestation.