Significance of cervical secretion culture in predicting maternal and fetal outcome in pregnant women with premature rupture of membranes: a retrospective cohort study
Zhenna Wang, Xiaoyan Xiu, Liying Zhong, Yi Wang, Zhuanji Fang, Shunhe Lin, Huihui Huang

TL;DR
This study found that positive cervical secretion cultures in pregnant women with PROM are linked to worse maternal and fetal outcomes, but the test isn't reliable for predicting chorioamnionitis.
Contribution
The study evaluates the predictive value of cervical secretion culture in PROM patients, revealing its limited efficacy despite associations with adverse outcomes.
Findings
Positive mycoplasma and bacterial cervical secretion cultures correlate with higher rates of chorioamnionitis and NICU admissions.
Cervical secretion culture has poor predictive power (AUC 0.569) compared to WBC and CRP for chorioamnionitis.
Combined predictive models with WBC, CRP, fever, and culture results show minimal improvement (IDI 0.0029).
Abstract
Background: To investigate the clinical value of cervical secretion culture in pregnant women with premature rupture of membranes (PROM) in predicting maternal and fetal outcomes. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed clinical records of pregnant women who underwent obstetric examination and delivered in Fujian Maternal and Child Healthcare from December 2013 to December 2016. Pregnant women with a clear diagnosis of PROM, who underwent cervical secretion culture immediately after hospital admission were selected for the study. The primary outcome was the occurrence of chorioamnionitis. The secondary outcome was neonatal admission to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Correlation between maternal and fetal outcomes and the results of the cervical secretion culture was analyzed by one-way analysis and multifactorial analysis, respectively. The predictive efficacy of cervical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPreterm Birth and Chorioamnionitis · Reproductive tract infections research · Neonatal Respiratory Health Research
