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Original Articles

Shear wave elastography: the relationship of the cervical stiffness with gestational age and cervical length- a feasibility study

, ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 9684-9693 | Received 03 Jun 2021, Accepted 04 Mar 2022, Published online: 25 Mar 2022
 

Abstract

Objectives

To standardize the measurement of shear wave elastography for assessment of cervical stiffness and its relationship with gestational age and cervical length.

Methods

A prospective cross-sectional study was conducted from September 2017 to March 2019. Data from 125 unselected women (at 11–13 + 6, 18–22 and 24–28 weeks’ gestation) and 55 high-risk women were analyzed for the study. Six regions of interest were evaluated for cervical elastography in the mid-sagittal position by transvaginal ultrasound. Statistical analyses were performed using R statistical language in R-studio. Delivery outcomes were recorded for each patient.

Results

The shear wave elastography was feasible with good intraoperator and interoperator reproducibility. The endocervical canal and anterior lip internal position had the highest reproducibility (ICC-0.82, 0.75). Shear wave speed was significantly higher in all internal os regions than the external os. There was a statistically significant negative linear relationship of shear wave speed with the gestational age. There was a weak positive relationship between shear wave speed and cervical length. There was no difference between pregnancies with and without spontaneous preterm delivery in shear wave speed measurements and cervical length, although numbers were small for statistical analysis. The internal os of the large loop excision of the transformation zone group was stiffer than the normal population.

Conclusion

Cervical elastography is feasible and effectively evaluates the tensile properties of the cervix during pregnancy. The most reproducible measurements were obtained at the anterior lip of the internal cervical os. Combining evaluation of cervical elasticity and length might further improve the identification of women at risk of preterm delivery. Currently, technical issues hinder the practical application of shear wave elastography in the clinical setting and require further research and development of the imaging modality.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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