Publication | Open Access
Mifepristone Pretreatment for the Medical Management of Early Pregnancy Loss
216
Citations
25
References
2018
Year
Medical management of early pregnancy loss is an alternative to uterine aspiration, yet misoprostol alone frequently fails. The study aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of mifepristone pretreatment followed by misoprostol versus misoprostol alone for early pregnancy loss. Three hundred women with anembryonic gestation or confirmed fetal death were randomized to receive either 200 mg oral mifepristone plus 800 µg vaginal misoprostol or 800 µg vaginal misoprostol alone, with follow‑up evaluation by blinded investigators 1–4 days later and 30‑day monitoring. Mifepristone pretreatment increased complete sac expulsion after one dose of misoprostol (83.8 % vs 67.1 %) and reduced uterine aspiration (8.8 % vs 23.5 %), with similar rates of bleeding and infection, indicating higher likelihood of successful management. The trial was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NCT02012491).
Medical management of early pregnancy loss is an alternative to uterine aspiration, but standard medical treatment with misoprostol commonly results in treatment failure. We compared the efficacy and safety of pretreatment with mifepristone followed by treatment with misoprostol with the efficacy and safety of misoprostol use alone for the management of early pregnancy loss.We randomly assigned 300 women who had an anembryonic gestation or in whom embryonic or fetal death was confirmed to receive pretreatment with 200 mg of mifepristone, administered orally, followed by 800 μg of misoprostol, administered vaginally (mifepristone-pretreatment group), or 800 μg of misoprostol alone, administered vaginally (misoprostol-alone group). Participants returned 1 to 4 days after misoprostol use for evaluation, including ultrasound examination, by an investigator who was unaware of the treatment-group assignments. Women in whom the gestational sac was not expelled were offered expectant management, a second dose of misoprostol, or uterine aspiration. We followed all participants for 30 days after randomization. Our primary outcome was gestational sac expulsion with one dose of misoprostol by the first follow-up visit and no additional intervention within 30 days after treatment.Complete expulsion after one dose of misoprostol occurred in 124 of 148 women (83.8%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 76.8 to 89.3) in the mifepristone-pretreatment group and in 100 of 149 women (67.1%; 95% CI, 59.0 to 74.6) in the misoprostol-alone group (relative risk, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.09 to 1.43). Uterine aspiration was performed less frequently in the mifepristone-pretreatment group than in the misoprostol-alone group (8.8% vs. 23.5%; relative risk, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.21 to 0.68). Bleeding that resulted in blood transfusion occurred in 2.0% of the women in the mifepristone-pretreatment group and in 0.7% of the women in the misoprostol-alone group (P=0.31); pelvic infection was diagnosed in 1.3% of the women in each group.Pretreatment with mifepristone followed by treatment with misoprostol resulted in a higher likelihood of successful management of first-trimester pregnancy loss than treatment with misoprostol alone. (Funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; PreFaiR ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02012491 . ).".
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