Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3956199 | Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology | 2014 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of abdominal cerclage via laparoscopy vs laparotomy and before vs after conception. We evaluated 16 studies of abdominal cerclage involving a total of 678 cases published between 1990 and 2013. We estimated the effect of laparotomy over laparoscopy and the effect of preconceptional over postconceptional cerclage using a generalized linear model by treating the success rates (third-trimester delivery and live birth) as dependent variables and laparotomy and preconceptional as independent factors. The results demonstrated that there was no difference in the rates of third-trimester delivery and live birth rates between preconceptional abdominal cerclage via laparoscopy (71.4%-83.3% and 90%-100%, respectively) or laparotomy (97.3%-100% and 100%, respectively). For postconceptional cerclage, the rates of third-trimester delivery and live birth via laparoscopy were 70% and 70% to 100%, respectively, and via laparotomy were 77.4% to 99.5% and 85.2% to 100%, respectively. There was no difference in the live birth rates when abdominal cerclage was performed before or during pregnancy. We concluded that the rates of third-trimester delivery and live birth after abdominal cerclage via laparoscopy are high and comparable to those via laparotomy. The efficacy of the procedure performed either before or during pregnancy is similar. Abdominal cerclage performed before conception is more practical than after conception. With the inherent advantages of laparoscopy over laparotomy, abdominal cerclage performed via laparoscopy is preferable, in particular when performed in non-pregnant women.
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Authors
Togas MD, MHCM, Nadin MD, Ghaidaa MD, Xianming PhD,