Vaginal progesterone vs cervical pessary in the first trimester of pregnancy for preventing preterm birth: a multicenter randomized clinical trial
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Background: Preterm birth has increased in the last decades and it has a lot of negative
consequences not only for the new-borns, but also for their families and for the health
system. Several studies found evidence about doing a vaginal ultrasonography in the
mid-trimester of pregnancy to those women with risk factors of preterm birth to measure
their cervix length. If the cervix is ≤25 mm, preventive treatment will be recommended.
This treatment would be vaginal progesterone or a cervical pessary. Some studies
showed that the measure of the cervix length could be done earlier because there is a
relationship between the short cervix in the 2nd and sooner in the 1st trimester. Thus, the
prevention could be done since the 1st trimester of pregnancy.
Objective: To prove if the vaginal progesterone is a better preventive treatment than
cervical pessary, both used since the 1st trimester of pregnancy, in those asymptomatic
women with risk factors of prematurity, single gestations and a cervix length of ≤30 mm.
Design and methods: It is a multicentre randomized clinical trial, including 900 pregnant
women that will be recruited in five hospitals of Catalonia for 20 months. They will be
randomized in two different groups: 450 women will receive vaginal progesterone, and a
cervical pessary will be inserted in 450 women. We will collect the preterm birth rate in
each group to do a statistical analysis and compare the percentages adjusted for all the
co-variables.
Participants: pregnant asymptomatic women, with single gestation, risk factors for
preterm birth and a cervix length of ≤30 mm measured by vaginal ultrasound within 11-
13+6 weeks of gestation