# Effect of caesarean birth on perinatal mortality for singleton breech presentation in spontaneous preterm labour—A target trial emulation using Scottish health record data

**Authors:** Robin Alexander, Swetha Bhaskar, Amaya Azcoaga-Lorenzo, Adeniyi Francis Fagbamigbe, Clarine Y.C. Chow, Kevin K. W. Kuan, Sarah J. Stock, Stefan A. Unger, Ben Swallow, Colin McCowan, Holger W. Unger

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0326001 · PLOS One · 2025-07-21

## TL;DR

This study found that caesarean birth reduces perinatal mortality in preterm breech labor compared to vaginal delivery, using Scottish health records.

## Contribution

The study uses target trial emulation to estimate the effect of caesarean birth on perinatal mortality in preterm breech labor where randomized trials are lacking.

## Key findings

- Caesarean birth reduced extended perinatal mortality compared to vaginal breech birth (OR 0.35).
- At 24 weeks, caesarean birth decreased perinatal death odds by 47.7% (OR 0.53).
- At 36 weeks, it was associated with an 82.1% reduction in perinatal death odds (OR 0.18).

## Abstract

The effects of mode of birth for women in preterm breech labour could not be successfully determined in randomised trials. We aimed to explore the effect of caesarean birth on perinatal mortality for women in spontaneous-onset preterm labour with a singleton baby presenting breech through target trial emulation.

A target trial emulation of a parallel group randomised controlled trial using routinely collected Scottish electronic health record data was performed. Participants were pregnant women at 24–36 gestational weeks with a singleton breech baby, no prior caesarean birth, in spontaneous labour with a live baby at labour onset (1 January 1997 to 31 December 2019). We compared caesarean birth (intervention) to vaginal breech birth (control) in a per-protocol analysis (actual mode of birth). The primary outcome was extended perinatal mortality (intrapartum stillbirths and neonatal deaths). A multiple logistic regression model with inverse probability weight was used to adjust for measured confounders.

There were 2,092 caesarean births and 967 vaginal breech births. In the emulated trial, caesarean birth reduced extended perinatal mortality compared to vaginal breech birth (odds ratio [OR] 0.35, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.27 to 0.43). At 24 weeks’ gestation, caesarean birth decreased the odds of perinatal death by 47.7% (OR: 0.53, 95% CI: 0.35 to 0.78). At 36 gestational weeks it was associated with an 82.1% reduction in the odds of perinatal death (OR: 0.18, 95% CI: 0.10 to 0.32). As the risk of perinatal mortality is inversely correlated with gestational age at birth, seven and 88 caesarean births were needed to prevent one perinatal death at 24 weeks and 36 weeks’ gestation, respectively.

Caesarean birth was associated with a reduced risk of extended perinatal mortality in spontaneous preterm singleton breech labour in a per-protocol trial emulation. Observational data that accurately captures planned mode of birth and unmeasured confounders such as breech subtype is required to emulate an intention-to-treat analysis.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** perinatal death (MESH:D066087), stillbirths (MESH:D050497), deaths (MESH:D003643), preterm labour (MESH:D047928), breech labour (MESH:D001946)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12279104/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12279104