Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Vaginal birth after cesarean: a 10-year experience.

251

Citations

0

References

1994

Year

TLDR

The study reports how the incidence of prior cesarean deliveries changed and how increased use of trial of labor affected repeat cesarean rates from 1983 to 1992. Data were collected retrospectively from delivery logs and patient charts of 164,815 births, documenting trial of labor usage (80% for one prior cesarean, 54% for two, 30% for three or more) and outcomes. Trial of labor lowered repeat cesarean rates by 6.4%, with an 83% success rate after one prior cesarean versus 75.3% after two or more, but uterine rupture was three times more common with multiple prior cesareans, resulting in three perinatal and one maternal rupture‑related deaths.

Abstract

To report the changing incidence of previous cesarean delivery, and the increasing use and success of a trial of labor and its effect on the repeat cesarean rate.Between 1983-1992, there were 164,815 deliveries at Los Angeles County+University of Southern California Women's Hospital, of which 17,322 (10.5%) were to women with at least one previous cesarean delivery. Data were gathered on an ongoing basis from delivery logs and patient charts.Women with at least one previous cesarean accounted for 8.1% of all deliveries in 1983, increasing to 14.1% by 1992. Trial of labor was used in 80% of women with one previous cesarean, in 54% with two, and in 30% with three or more. The success rate was significantly higher with one previous cesarean (83%) than with two or more (75.3%). Furthermore, uterine rupture was three times more common with two or more previous cesareans. Compared to a policy of routine repeat cesarean, trial of labor yielded a 6.4% lower cesarean delivery rate. The majority of this benefit (5.5%) was derived by women with one previous cesarean. Among women undergoing a trial of labor, there were three rupture-related perinatal deaths and a single rupture-related maternal death.Substantial reduction in the cesarean rate is achieved safely and efficiently by encouraging a trial of labor in women with a single previous cesarean delivery.