C ervical Ripening at H ome o r I n- H ospital during Induction of
Labour: the CHOICE prospective c ohort study
Abstract
Objective To determine whether home cervical ripening is
associated with acceptable safety margins compared to in-hospital
cervical ripening during induction of labour. Design A
prospective multicentre observational cohort study using routinely
collected data. Setting Twenty-six UK maternity units; 18
offering only in-hospital cervical ripening and 8 offering both
in-hospital and home cervical ripening. Population Women with
singleton pregnancies, no previous caesarean section, at or beyond 37
weeks gestation having induction with details of cervical ripening
method and location recorded. Methods Home cervical ripening
using a balloon catheter was compared to in-hospital cervical ripening
using prostaglandin. Multivariable logistic regression was performed for
the primary outcome. Exposure: Cervical ripening at home using balloon
catheter. Main outcome measures Primary outcome: neonatal unit
admission within 48 hours of birth for 48 hours or more. Additional
neonatal, maternal, labour progress and process outcomes were reported.
Results Of 17,530 eligible women, 515 had balloon cervical
ripening at home and 4332 had prostaglandin cervical ripening in a
hospital that did not offer home cervical ripening. The primary outcome
following home cervical ripening with balloon was not higher {16/515
(3.1%) vs 208/4332 (4.8%)}, but with substantial uncertainty on
adjusted analysis consistent with a 64% lower risk through to an 81%
higher risk. Conclusions Home cervical ripening using balloon
catheter may be as safe for babies as using prostaglandin in hospital in
low and moderate-risk groups, but further safety data are required.