Abstract
Objective
To evaluate the causes of MTM and their impact on subsequent pregnancies.
Material and methods
A retrospective single-center cohort study of all pregnancies with a second-trimester pregnancy loss between 14 weeks and 21 weeks + 6 days gestation, excluding terminations of pregnancy (TOP) and in utero fetal deaths. Predefined criteria were used to allocate cases to one of 6 primary etiologic diagnoses: cervical insufficiency, chorioamnionitis, placental anomalies, fetal anomalies, iatrogenic causes, or abdominal trauma.
Results
Among 578 mid-trimester fetal losses, 175 were MTM, a prevalence of 5.7 per 1000 live births in the center. The suspected primary cause was cervical insufficiency in 76 cases (43.4%), chorioamnionitis in 59 (33.7%), placental anomalies or preterm premature rupture of membranes in 26 (14.8%), iatrogenic in 8 (4.6%), trauma in 3 (1.7%), and undetermined in 3 cases (1.7%). A subsequent pregnancy beyond 14 WG was recorded for 78 patients. Recurrent MTM occurred in 21.8% and preterm deliveries in 14.1% ; 13% of patients without evidence of cervical insufficiency in the index pregnancy required emergency cerclage.
Conclusion
Cervical insufficiency was the leading cause of MTM, with a high risk of recurrent MTM or preterm birth, thus prophylactic cerclage or cervical length measurements should be considered for subsequent pregnancies.
Acknowledgments
The authors are grateful to their patients who took part in the study and to all staff members.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).