A2 Refereed review article in a scientific journal

Outpatient or Inpatient Setting for Cervical Ripening Before Induction of Labour: An Individual Participant Data Meta‐Analysis




AuthorsPatabendige, Malitha; Chan, Fei; Wise, Michelle R.; Thompson, John M. D.; Beckmann, Michael; Saad, Antonio F.; Saade, George R.; Subramaniam, Akila; Tita, Alan; Policiano, Catarina; Clode, Nuno; Henry, Amanda; Haavisto, Henna; Rinne, Kirsi; Chen, Vicky; Sheehan, Penelope; Kohari, Katherine; Hosier, Hillary; Pierce‐Williams, Rebecca; Berghella, Vincenzo; Rolnik, Daniel L.; Mol, Ben W.; Li, Wentao

PublisherWiley-Blackwell

Publication year2025

JournalBJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology

Journal name in sourceBJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology

ISSN1470-0328

eISSN1471-0528

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0528.18253

Web address https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0528.18253

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/499101639


Abstract

Background: The optimal methods and settings for induction of labour (IOL) in terms of effectiveness, safety, and women'sexperience are still not elucidated.

Objective: To compare the effectiveness and safety of outpatient versus inpatient cervical ripening settings for IOL.

Search Strategy: MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare, CINAHL Plus, Scopus, Cochrane Library, WHO ICTRP and clinicaltrials.govfrom inception to July 2024.

Selection Criteria: Randomised controlled trials, viable singleton gestation, no language restrictions, all the published andunpublished data.

Data Collection and Analysis: An individual participant data meta-analysis.

Main Results: Eleven out of 18 (61.1%) eligible RCTs shared IPD, totalling 2593 pregnant individuals undergoing IOL (62.2% of allparticipants in the published RCTs). Among the shared RCTs, four used balloon catheters alone in both groups. Three RCTs com-pared outpatient balloon catheter with inpatient balloon catheter plus oxytocin. Another three RCTs compared outpatient ballooncatheter to inpatient vaginal dinoprostone. One RCT used Dilapan-S in both groups. No trials evaluating outpatient use of vaginalprostaglandins were identified. Vaginal birth (11 RCTs, 2584 women, 67.8% vs. 70.2%, aOR 0.95, 95% CI 0.70; 1.30), composite perina-tal outcome (9 RCTs, 2525 women, 11.1% vs. 11.7%, aOR 0.93, 95% CI 0.75; 1.16) and composite maternal (10 RCTs, 2480 women, 14.3%vs. 15.4%, aOR 0.89, 95% CI 0.65; 1.20) outcome did not differ between outpatient and inpatient groups. The outpatient group had alower risk of acidosis, more epidural analgesia, and more oxytocin. There were no perinatal deaths in either group.

Conclusions: Overall effectiveness, perinatal and maternal safety are comparable between outpatient setting cervical ripeningwith a mechanical method and inpatient with any method.

Trial Registration: PROSPERO: CRD42022313183


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Funding information in the publication
This study is supported by three NHMRC Investigator Grants (GNT1176437 for B.W.M., GNT2016729 for W.L. and GNT2025670 for D.L.R.). These funding sources had no role in the design, execution, analyses, or data interpretation for this research. M.P. is supported by a Research Training Stipend provided by the Australian Government.


Last updated on 2025-29-08 at 13:15