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Comparison of maternal outcomes and clinical characteristics of prenatally vs nonprenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
This study aimed to compare maternal outcomes of prenatally and nonprenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum.
A systematic literature search was performed in PubMed, the Cochrane database, and Web of Science until November 28, 2022.
Studies comparing the clinical presentation of prenatally and nonprenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum were included. The primary outcomes were emergent cesarean delivery, hysterectomy, blood loss volume, number of transfused blood product units, urological injury, coagulopathy, reoperation, intensive care unit admission, and maternal death. In addition, the pooled mean values for blood loss volume and the number of transfused blood product units were calculated. The secondary outcomes included maternal age, gestational age at birth, nulliparity, previous cesarean delivery, previous uterine procedure, assisted reproductive technology, placenta increta and percreta, and placenta previa.
Study screening was performed after duplicates were identified and removed. The quality of each study and the publication bias were assessed. Forest plots and I2 statistics were calculated for each study outcome for each group. The main analysis was a random-effects analysis.
Overall, 415 abstracts and 157 full-text studies were evaluated. Moreover, 31 studies were analyzed. Prenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum was associated with a significantly lower rate of emergency cesarean delivery (odds ratio, 0.37; 95% confidence interval, 0.21-0.67), higher hysterectomy rate (odds ratio, 1.98; 95% confidence interval, 1.02-3.83), lower blood loss volume (mean difference, -0.65; 95% confidence interval, -1.17 to -0.13), and lower number of transfused red blood cell units (mean difference, -1.96; 95% confidence interval, -3.25 to -0.68) compared with nonprenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum. The pooled mean values for blood loss volume and the number of transfused blood product units tended to be lower in the prenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum groups than in the nonprenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum groups. Nulliparity (odds ratio, 0.14; 95% confidence interval, 0.10-0.20), previous cesarean delivery (odds ratio, 6.81; 95% confidence interval, 4.12-11.25), assisted reproductive technology (odds ratio, 0.19; 95% confidence interval, 0.06-0.61), placenta increta and percreta (odds ratio, 3.97; 95% confidence interval, 2.24-7.03), and placenta previa (odds ratio, 6.81; 95% confidence interval, 4.12-11.25) showed statistical significance. No significant difference was found for the other outcomes.
Despite its severity, the positive effect of prenatally diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum on outcomes underscores the necessity of a prenatal diagnosis. In addition, the pooled mean values provide a preoperative preparation guideline.
Sugai S
,Yamawaki K
,Sekizuka T
,Haino K
,Yoshihara K
,Nishijima K
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Emergency delivery in pregnancies at high probability of placenta accreta spectrum on prenatal imaging: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Placenta accreta spectrum disorders are associated with a high risk of maternal morbidity, particularly when surgery is performed under emergency conditions. This study aimed to investigate the incidence of emergency cesarean delivery in patients with a high probability of placenta accreta spectrum disorders on prenatal imaging and to compare the maternal and neonatal outcomes between patients requiring emergency cesarean delivery and those not requiring emergency cesarean delivery.
MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane, and ClinicalTrials.gov databases were searched.
This study included case-control studies reporting the outcomes of pregnancies with a high probability of placenta accreta spectrum on prenatal imaging confirmed at birth delivered via unplanned emergency cesarean delivery vs those delivered via planned elective cesarean delivery for maternal or fetal indications. The outcomes observed were the occurrence of emergency cesarean delivery; incidence of placenta accreta and placenta increta/placenta percreta; preterm birth at <34 weeks of gestation; and indications for emergency delivery. This study analyzed and compared the outcomes between patients who underwent emergency cesarean delivery and those who underwent elective cesarean delivery, including estimated blood loss; number of packed red blood cell units transfused and blood products transfused; transfusion of more than 4 units of packed red blood cell; ureteral, bladder, or bowel injury; disseminated intravascular coagulation; relaparotomy after the primary surgery; maternal infection or fever; wound infection; vesicouterine or vesicovaginal fistula; admission to the neonatal intensive care unit; maternal death; composite neonatal morbidity; fetal or neonatal loss; Apgar score of <7 at 5 minutes; and neonatal birthweight.
Quality assessment of the included studies was performed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale for case-control and cohort studies. Random-effect meta-analyses of proportions, risks, and mean differences were used to combine the data.
A total of 11 studies with 1290 pregnancies complicated by placenta accreta spectrum were included in the systematic review. Emergency cesarean delivery was reported in 36.2% of pregnancies (95% confidence interval, 28.1-44.9) with placenta accreta spectrum at birth, of which 80.3% of cases (95% confidence interval, 36.5-100.0) occurred before 34 weeks of gestation. The main indication for emergency cesarean delivery was antepartum bleeding, which complicated 61.8% of the cases (95% confidence interval, 32.1-87.4). Patients who underwent emergent cesarean delivery had higher estimated blood loss during surgery (pooled mean difference, 595 mL; 95% confidence interval, 116.10-1073.90; P<.001), higher number of packed red blood cells transfused (pooled mean difference, 2.3 units; 95% confidence interval, 0.99-3.60; P<.001), and higher number of blood products transfused (pooled mean difference, 3.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.10-4.90; P=.002) than patients who underwent scheduled cesarean delivery. Patients who underwent emergency cesarean delivery had a higher risk of requiring transfusion of more than 4 units of packed red blood cell (odds ratio, 3.8; 95% confidence interval, 1.7-4.9; P=.002), bladder injury (odds ratio, 2.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-4.0; P=.003), disseminated intravascular coagulation (odds ratio, 6.1; 95% confidence interval, 3.1-13.1; P<.001), and admission to the intensive care unit (odds ratio, 2.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-3.3; P<.001). Newborns delivered via emergency cesarean delivery had a higher risk of adverse composite neonatal outcomes (odds ratio, 2.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-4.7; P=.019), admission to the neonatal intensive care unit (odds ratio, 2.5; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-5.6; P=.029), Apgar score of <7 at 5 minutes (odds ratio, 2.7; 95% confidence interval, 1.5-4.9; P=.002), and fetal or neonatal loss (odds ratio, 8.2; 95% confidence interval, 2.5-27.4; P<.001).
Emergency cesarean delivery complicates approximately 35% of pregnancies affected by placenta accreta spectrum disorders and is associated with a higher risk of adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes. Large prospective studies are needed to evaluate the clinical and imaging signs that can identify patients with a high probability of placenta accreta spectrum at birth, patients at risk of requiring emergency cesarean delivery or peripartum hysterectomy, and patients at high risk of experiencing intrapartum hemorrhage.
Lucidi A
,Janiaux E
,Hussein AM
,Nieto-Calvache A
,Khalil A
,D'Amico A
,Rizzo G
,D'Antonio F
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Pathologically diagnosed placenta accreta spectrum without placenta previa: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to assess clinical characteristics related to pathologically proven placenta accreta spectrum without placenta previa.
A literature search of PubMed, the Cochrane database, and Web of Science was performed from inception to September 7, 2022.
The primary outcomes were invasive placenta (including increta or percreta), blood loss, hysterectomy, and antenatal diagnosis. In addition, maternal age, assisted reproductive technology, previous cesarean delivery, and previous uterine procedures were investigated as potential risk factors. The inclusion criteria were studies evaluating the clinical presentation of pathologically diagnosed PAS without placenta previa.
Study screening was conducted after duplicates were identified and removed. The quality of each study and the publication bias were assessed. Forest plots and I2 statistics were calculated for each study outcome for each group. The main analysis was a random-effects analysis.
Among 2598 studies that were initially retrieved, 5 were included in the review. With the exception of 1 study, 4 studies were included in the meta-analysis. This meta-analysis showed that placenta accreta spectrum without placenta previa was associated with less risk of invasive placenta (odds ratio, 0.24; 95% confidence interval, 0.16-0.37), blood loss (mean difference, -1.19; 95% confidence interval, -2.09 to -0.28) and hysterectomy (odds ratio, 0.11; 95% confidence interval, 0.02-0.53), and more difficult to diagnose prenatally (odds ratio, 0.13; 95% confidence interval, 0.04-0.45) than placenta accreta spectrum with placenta previa. In addition, assisted reproductive technology and a previous uterine procedure were strong risk factors for placenta accreta spectrum without placenta previa, whhereas previous cesarean delivery was a strong risk factor for placenta accreta spectrum with placenta previa.
The differences in clinical aspects of placenta accreta spectrum with and without placenta previa need to be understood.
Sugai S
,Yamawaki K
,Sekizuka T
,Haino K
,Yoshihara K
,Nishijima K
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Trends, characteristics, and outcomes of placenta accreta spectrum: a national study in the United States.
Although an infrequent occurrence, the placenta can adhere abnormally to the gravid uterus leading to significantly high maternal morbidity and mortality during cesarean delivery. Contemporary national statistics related to a morbidly adherent placenta, referred to as placenta accreta spectrum, are needed.
This study aimed to examine national trends, characteristics, and perioperative outcomes of women who underwent cesarean delivery for placenta accreta spectrum in the United States.
This is a population-based retrospective, observational study querying the National Inpatient Sample. The study cohort included women who underwent cesarean delivery from October 2015 to December 2017 and had a diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum. The main outcome measures were patient characteristics and surgical outcomes related to placenta accreta spectrum assessed by the generalized estimating equation on multivariable analysis. The temporal trend of placenta accreta spectrum was also assessed by linear segmented regression with log transformation.
Of 2,727,477 cases who underwent cesarean delivery during the study period, 8030 (0.29%) had the diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum. Placenta accreta was the most common diagnosis (n=6205, 0.23%), followed by percreta (n=1060, 0.04%) and increta (n=765, 0.03%). The number of placenta accreta spectrum cases increased by 2.1% every quarter year from 0.27% to 0.32% (P=.004). On multivariable analysis, (1) patient demographics (older age, tobacco use, recent diagnosis, higher comorbidity, and use of assisted reproductive technology), (2) pregnancy characteristics (placenta previa, previous cesarean delivery, breech presentation, and grand multiparity), and (3) hospital factors (urban teaching center and large bed capacity hospital) represented the independent characteristics related to placenta accreta spectrum (all, P<.05). The median gestational age at cesarean delivery was 36 weeks for placenta accreta and 34 weeks for both placenta increta and percreta vs 39 weeks for non-placenta accreta spectrum cases (P<.001). On multivariable analysis, cesarean delivery complicated by placenta accreta spectrum was associated with increased risk of any surgical morbidities (78.3% vs 10.6%), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-defined severe maternal morbidity (60.3% vs 3.1%), hemorrhage (54.1% vs 3.9%), coagulopathy (5.3% vs 0.3%), shock (5.0% vs 0.1%), urinary tract injury (8.3% vs 0.2%), and death (0.25% vs 0.01%) compared with cesarean delivery without placenta accreta spectrum. When further analyzed by subtype, cesarean delivery for placenta increta and percreta was associated with higher likelihood of hysterectomy (0.4% for non-placenta accreta spectrum, 45.8% for accreta, 82.4% for increta, 78.3% for percreta; P<.001) and urinary tract injury (0.2% for non-placenta accreta spectrum, 5.2% for accreta, 11.8% for increta, 24.5% for percreta; P<.001). Moreover, women in the placenta increta and percreta groups had markedly increased risks of surgical mortality compared with those without placenta accreta spectrum (increta, odds ratio, 19.9; and percreta, odds ratio, 32.1).
Patient characteristics and outcomes differ across the placenta accreta spectrum subtypes, and women with placenta increta and percreta have considerably high surgical morbidity and mortality risks. Notably, 1 in 313 women undergoing cesarean delivery had a diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum by the end of 2017, and the incidence seems to be higher than reported in previous studies.
Matsuzaki S
,Mandelbaum RS
,Sangara RN
,McCarthy LE
,Vestal NL
,Klar M
,Matsushima K
,Amaya R
,Ouzounian JG
,Matsuo K
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Focal-occult placenta accreta: a clandestine source of maternal morbidity.
Focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum is known to cause adverse obstetrical morbidity outcomes, however, direct comparisons with previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum morbidity are lacking.
We sought to compare the baseline characteristics, surgical and obstetrical morbidity, and subsequent pregnancy outcomes of patients with focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum with those of patients with previa-associated accreta.
A retrospective review was conducted of all pathologically confirmed placenta accreta spectrum cases from 2018 to 2022 at a tertiary care center. The baseline characteristics, surgical, obstetrical, and subsequent pregnancy outcomes were recorded. Cases of focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum was compared with cases of previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum across a range of morbidity characteristics including hemorrhagic factors, interventions, postdelivery reoperations, infections, and intensive care unit admission. Statistical comparison was performed using Kruskal-Wallis or chi-square tests, and a P value of <.05 was considered significant.
A total of 74 cases were identified with 43 focal-occult and 31 previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum cases. Of those, 25.6% of the patients with focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum and 100% of the patients with previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum underwent a hysterectomy. One case of focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum and 29 cases of previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum were diagnosed antenatally. Patients with focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum did not differ from those with previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum in mean maternal age (33.0 vs 33.1 years), body mass index, or the incidence of previous dilation and curettage procedures (16.3% vs 25.8%). Patients with focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum were significantly more likely to have a lower mean parity (1.5 vs 3.6 gestations), higher gestational age at delivery (36.1 vs 33.9 weeks' gestation), and were less likely to have had a previous cesarean delivery (12/43, 27.9% vs 30/31, 96.8%). In addition, patients with focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum had less previous cesarean deliveries (mean, 0.5 vs 2.3), were more likely to have undergone in vitro fertilization (20.9% vs 3.2%), and less likely to have anterior placentation. When contrasting the clinical outcomes of patients with focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum with those with previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum, the postpartum hemorrhage rates (71.0% vs 67.4%), mean quantitative blood loss (2099 mL; range, 500-9516 mL vs 2119 mL; range 350-12,220 mL), mean units of red blood cells transfused (1.4 vs 1.7), massive transfusion rate (9.3% vs 3.2%), and intensive care unit admission rates (11.6% vs 6.5%) were not significantly different, but there was a nonsignificant trend toward higher morbidity among patients with focal-occult accreta. Patients with focal-occult accreta had a higher incidence of reoperations or return to the operating room (30.2 vs 6.5%; P=.01). When comparing focal-occult with previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum, the composite outcomes, including hemorrhagic morbidity (77.4% vs 74.4%), any maternal morbidity (83.9% vs 76.7%), and severe maternal morbidity (64.5% vs 65.1%), were not significantly different between the groups. Nine focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum patients had a subsequent pregnancy, and 3 of those had recurrent placenta accreta spectrum.
Focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum presents with fewer identifiable risk factors than placenta previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum but may be associated with an in vitro fertilization pregnancy. Patients with focal-occult placenta accreta spectrum was observed to have a higher incidence of reoperation when compared with patients previa-associated placenta accreta spectrum, and no other statistically significant differences in morbidity outcomes were observed. The absence of differences in morbidity outcomes may be attributable to a lack of antenatal detection of focal-occult accreta and merits further investigation.
Larish A
,Horst K
,Brunton J
,Schenone M
,Branda M
,Mehta R
,Packard A
,VanBuren W
,Norgan A
,Shahi M
,Missert A
,Pompeian R
,Greenwood J
,Theiler R
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