A prospective comparison of selective and universal electronic fetal monitoring in 34,995 pregnancies

The New England Journal of Medicine, 315(10), 615-619

DOI 10.1056/NEJM198609043151004 PMID 3736600

Abstract

We investigated the effects of using intrapartum electronic fetal monitoring in all pregnancies, as compared with using it only in cases in which the fetus is judged to be at high risk. Predominant risk factors included oxytocin stimulation of labor, dysfunctional labor, abnormal fetal heart rate, or meconium-stained amniotic fluid. This prospective alternate-month clinical trial took place over a 36-month period during which 34,995 women gave birth. In alternate months, either 7 (for "selective monitoring") or 19 (for "universal monitoring") fetal monitors were made available in the labor and delivery unit. During the "selective" months, 6420 of 17,409 women (37 percent) were electronically monitored, as compared with 13,956 of 17,586 women (79 percent) during the "universal months." Universal monitoring was associated with a small but significant increase in the incidence of delivery by cesarean section because of fetal distress, but perinatal outcomes as assessed by intrapartum stillbirths, low Apgar scores, a need for assisted ventilation of the newborn, admission to the intensive care nursery, or neonatal seizures were not significantly different. We conclude that not all pregnancies, and particularly not those considered at low risk of perinatal complications, need continuous electronic fetal monitoring during labor.

Topics

electronic fetal monitoring selective versus universal labor, intrapartum fetal monitoring cesarean section rate, continuous electronic fetal monitoring low risk pregnancy, Leveno prospective trial electronic fetal monitoring, fetal distress cesarean delivery electronic monitoring impact, perinatal outcomes selective universal fetal monitoring comparison, neonatal seizures Apgar score electronic monitoring effectiveness, alternate month clinical trial fetal monitoring 34995 pregnancies, low risk labor fetal monitoring necessity evidence, intrapartum stillbirth electronic monitoring prevention
PMID 3736600 3736600 DOI 10.1056/NEJM198609043151004 10.1056/NEJM198609043151004

Cite this article

Leveno, K. J., Cunningham, F. G., Nelson, S., Roark, M., Williams, M. L., Guzick, D., Dowling, S., Rosenfeld, C. R., & Buckley, A. (1986). A prospective comparison of selective and universal electronic fetal monitoring in 34,995 pregnancies. *The New England journal of medicine*, *315*(10), 615-619. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJM198609043151004

Related articles