Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03111316

Foley Catheter Compared to the Foley Catheter Alone for Cervical Ripening

Combined Use of the Controlled Release Dinoprostone Insert and Foley Catheter Compared to the Foley Catheter Alone for Cervical Ripening and Labor Induction in Term Women: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Oklahoma · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In term women presenting for labor induction, combined use of the controlled release dinoprostone vaginal insert and Foley catheter for cervical ripening will decrease the median time from induction to vaginal delivery by at least four hours compared to the Foley catheter alone.

Detailed description

Those who provide informed consent will be allocated by an online randomization system either to placement of a transcervical Foley catheter and an intravaginal dinoprostone controlled release insert or a Foley catheter alone. Randomization will be stratified by parity (nulliparous or parous). In both study groups, the balloon on the end of the Foley catheter will be inflated with 30 mL of sterile water, pulled back against the internal os of the cervix, and taped to the maternal thigh under minimal tension. Also in both groups, the Foley catheter will be removed if any of the following occurs: 1) expulsion, 2) fetal heart rate tracing mandating evaluation for membrane rupture and placement of internal monitors, 3) spontaneous membrane rupture, or 4) if 12 hours has elapsed since placement. The dinoprostone insert will be removed if: 1) the fetal heart rate tracing mandates evaluation for membrane rupture and placement of internal monitors, 2) tachysystole develops (more than 5 contractions per 10 minutes averaged over 30 minutes, 3) spontaneous membrane rupture, or 4) 12 hours has elapsed since placement. Though these are the criteria for insert removal, in keeping with the pragmatic design of this trial, the decision regarding removal will be left to the discretion of the attending physician. Women will remain recumbent for 30 minutes after agent placement and, except for trips to the restroom, will undergo continuous monitoring of uterine contractions and fetal heart rate. Oxytocin, according to standard intravenous protocol, will be allowed only after removal of cervical ripening agent(s). After specified cervical ripening, labor management will be at the discretion of the attending obstetrician, in keeping with the pragmatic nature of the study design. Antibiotics will be administered if indicated for prophylaxis against early-onset neonatal infection with group B streptococci or for treatment of chorioamnionitis. Cesarean delivery will be performed, per the discretion of the attending obstetrician, for standard maternal or fetal indications. Medical records will be reviewed no less than 30 days after delivery. Demographic, intrapartum, and outcome data will be entered into a computerized database.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGCervidil 10 MG Vaginal InsertDinoprostone vaginal insert is a thin, flat, polymeric slab which is rectangular in shape with rounded corners contained within the pouch of an off-white knitted polyester retrieval system, an integral part of which is a long tape. Each slab is buff colored, semitransparent and contains 10 mg of dinoprostone in a hydrogel insert. An integral part of the knitted polyester retrieval system is a long tape designed to aid retrieval at the end of the dosing interval or earlier if clinically indicated. The finished product is a controlled release formulation which has been found to release dinoprostone in vivo at a rate of approximately 0.3 mg/hr.
DEVICEFoley CatheterThe balloon on the end of the Foley catheter will be inflated with 30 mL of sterile water, pulled back against the internal os of the cervix, and taped to the maternal thigh under minimal tension.

Timeline

Start date
2017-04-09
Primary completion
2018-01-05
Completion
2020-07-24
First posted
2017-04-12
Last updated
2021-03-24
Results posted
2019-05-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03111316. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.