Title: Fetal Fibronectin Testing for Suspected Preterm Labour
1Fetal Fibronectin Testing for Suspected Preterm
Labour
- An emerging standard of care
- (Note Please feel free to use your own
background design)
2Fetal Fibronectin Testing for Suspected Preterm
Labour
- Objectives
- Discuss incidence of preterm labour provincially
and nationally - Describe the benefits of fetal fibronectin
testing - Outline insert province approach to this emerging
standard of care - Provide detailed clinical decision making and
procedures for fFN testing
3Preterm Labour (lt 37 weeks)
- 1 in 5 pregnant women exhibit signs and symptoms
of preterm labour. - 3-4 of births occur before 34 weeks
- Up to 70 of women identified as high-risk
deliver at term. - Maximum clinical judgment sensitivity for del
lt1week from admission was lt50 with minimal
cervical dilatation (lt 3 cm.).
4Preterm Birth
- Preterm birth rate is defined as the number of
live births with a gestational age less than 37
weeks completed weeks gestation - gt7.6 (all Provinces) of all pregnancies result
in preterm birth - Sources ACOG Technical Bulletin,1995, No. 206
National Vital Statistics Report 200048(3). St
John EB et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol.
2000182170-175. Macones, Am J ObGyn, Vol 181,
12/99
5Rate of Preterm Delivery by Province/Territory
(excluding Ontario) 2000
6Add own provincial data
7The Challenge
- The preterm birth rate has not decreased in the
last thirty years!!!
820 percent increase
Source CPSS Report 2003 p. 74
9Preterm Birth
How do we identify who is at Risk?
10Prevention/Intervention Strategies
11Risk Assessment Markers
- Biophysical markers
- Measurement of cervical length
- Biochemical markers
- Fetal fibronectin (fFN)
- Salivary estriol (E3)
- Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH)
- Interleukin-6 (IL-6)
12Potential Benefits of An Evidence-Based, Risk
Assessment Marker
- Identify women who are truly at risk.
- Identify and reassure women who are not at risk.
- Avoid separation of mother from her family.
- Avoid unnecessary expense of extended assessment
time, admission time, transport to a tertiary
centre. - Avoid unnecessary tocolytic and steriod use.
- Improved resource utilization.
- Potential research benefits e.g. focus tocolytic
trials on women who will potentially benefit.
13Fetal Fibronectin (FN)
- Fetal Fibronectin (fFN) is not new in obstetrics
practice - 1st literature appeared in 1985 as an oncogene
marker. - 1st OB-specific literature appeared in 1991 in
New England J. of Medicine by Lockwood, et al. - gt200 peer reviewed OB articles now published, 3
meta analyses, 9 Canada-specific abstracts
presented at SOGC. - Canada specific data documents reduced medication
use, reduced hospital day stays, reduced
transports - Canadian data is from level III hospitals, rural
and remote hospitals.
14What is Fetal Fibronectin (FN)
- Glycoprotein found in extracellular matrix of
amniotic membranes. - Binds chorion to decidua.
- Normally found in cervico-vaginal secretions
until 22 weeks gestation and again near the time
of labour. - Released into cervical/vaginal fluid in response
to inflammation or separation of amniotic
membranes from decidua. - Presence after 24 weeks is indicative of imminent
labour - Fetal (FN) immunoassay detects concentrations of
fetal fibronectin protein in cervicovaginal
fluids. - Presence of gt50 ng/mL considered positive.
15Fetal Fibronectin (FN)
16Normal FN Expression by Gestational Age
17Key Terminologyfor Evaluating PTD Diagnostics
- Negative Predictive Value (NPV) Answers the
question,If a woman has a negative test, how
likely is she NOT to deliver prematurely? - Positive Predictive Value (PPV) Answers the
question,If a woman has a positive test, how
likely is she to deliver prematurely? - Sensitivity Percent of women who have preterm
delivery whom the test correctly identifies - Specificity Percent of women who do NOT have
preterm delivery whom the test correctly
identifies
18Utility of FN for Predicting PTB in Symptomatic
Women
- PPV() NPV() Cx
Dilatation(cm) - Lockwood, 1991 (n117) 83 81
None - Morrison, 1993 (n28) 64 93
? 1 - Iams, 1995 (n192) 60 76 ? 3
- Burrus, 1995 (n37) 79 63 ? 3
- Bartnicki, 1996 (n112) 79 83
? 2 - Peaceman, 1997 (n725) 43 87 ? 3
19Women with Threatened Preterm Labour (1/25
deliver lt14 days)
FN - (80)
FN (20)
1/6 Deliver lt14 days
1/125 Deliver lt14 days
Peaceman, AJOG 1997 17713-8
20Nova Scotia Pilot Study April 2002-March 2004
(Armson Scott et. al.)
- Prospective cohort study
- Objectives
- To determine if introduction of rapid FN testing
for suspected PTL will - Reliably predict preterm birth
- Result in a reduction of
- PTL admissions/maternal transfer rates
- length of stay, tocolytic/corticosteroid use
- reproductive health care costs without
compromising neonatal outcomes
21Conclusions from Nova Scotia Study
- A negative FN test for suspected PTL accurately
identifies women not likely to deliver within 14
days (98 -99 accurate) - A positive FN test identifies women at high risk
for preterm birth - - 24 ? 7 days
- - 28 ? 14 days
- - 31 ? 34 weeks
- - 48 ? 37 weeks
- Diagnostic accuracy of FN superior to clinical
criteria for women with suspected preterm labour
22Conclusions from Nova Scotia Study
- Criteria for clinical use of FN appear to be
broad and inconsistent - Clinicians/patients somewhat reluctant to adhere
to guidelines of non-intervention for negative
FN results, particularly in regional centres. - Potential for reduction in maternal transfers,
hospital admissions and associated health care
costs
23Results from the Nova Scotia Study
- Implementation of province-wide Fetal Fibronectin
testing currently ongoing - Seed funding provided by NS Department of Health
- Goals
- To reduce unnecessary maternal transfers and
admissions for suspected preterm labour - To reduce psychosocial and financial burdens for
families
24BC Study
- Fetal Fibronectin collected by speculum exam from
admitted patients with symptomatic preterm labour - Assays were performed in our laboratory. The
results were revealed to the clinician within 1
8 hours - A retrospective chart review was undertaken to
assess pregnancy outcome - An estimate of the total hospital days saved was
developed using the ALOS for patients admitted
with a diagnosis of PTL prior to the utilization
of the Fetal Fibronectin Assay
25Results
- Of 62 patients tested, outcomes were known for 47
patients.
Delivered lt 14 days
Delivered gt 14 days
FFN ve
1
7
1
38
FFN ve
Sensitivity 50 PPV 12.5
Specificity 84 NPV 97
Farquharson, D., Lee, L.,Garg, A. Clinical
utilization and cost saving analysis of fetal
fibronectin assay in a tertiary care institution.
Abstracted presented at 2003 SOGC meeting,
Charlottetown.
26BC Study Results
- A total of 62 assays were conducted between May
2002 and March 2003 - Ages 18 39, mean 30
- GA on admission 20 33 weeks
- Length of stay ranged 1 44 days, mean 4.7 days
- Nulliparas 55
- Multiparas 45
27BC Study Conclusion
- Our experience in which Fetal Fibronectin Assay
(Adeza TLI) was used as an adjunct to diagnosis
and management of preterm labour suggest reduced
hospital utilization, and earlier reverse
transfer of these patients to their referring
institutions without adverse sequelae.
28Cost Savings (literature)
- Reduction in PTL admissions
- 486,000 saved
- (Joffe et al, AJOG 1999)
- Reduction in maternal transfers
- 30,297 saved
- (Giles et al, AJOG 2000)
29Resource Utilization - Canada
- Royal Victoria Hospital
- Observational cohort design
- 20 week periods before and after FN
- Singletons, 24-34 weeks, suspected PTL
-
-
-
- Abenhaim JOGC 2005 27689-94
30Effect of FN on Resource Utilization
__________________________________________________
_______ Baseline
Period Study Period p value
__________________________________________________
_______ Patients 116
116 Preterm Births 9 (7.8) 10
(8.6) NS PTL Admissions 28 (24.1) 14
(12.1) 0.02 Days Hospitalized 145
28 Mean LOS 5.2 0.6 0.01 Admission
Costs 102,660 26,169 Mean Cost 3,666
581 0.01
Abenhaim, JOGC 2005
27689-94
31Considerations
- Cost
- Approximately 100 per test
- Patient demand not experienced by other centres
- Physician overuse
- Estimate 20 -25 per years based on 2500 births/yr
- Close adherence to guideline
- Savings
- Cost of admission
- Cost of transfer
- Optimal use of tertiary beds
- Maternal/family reassurance/satisfaction
32Fetal Fibronectin Decision-Making Algorithm
BCRCP (2005) Obstetric Guideline 2A Preterm
Labour, p. 11
33Guidelines for Use of fFN test
Specimen should not be obtained in presence of
Cervical dilatation gt3 cm PROM Soaps, gels,
lubricants, or disinfectants Cervical
cerclage Moderate or gross vaginal
bleeding Sexual intercourse within 24 hours
Obtain specimen prior to procedures that may
disrupt cervix Digital examination Vaginal
ultrasound Microbiologic culture Pap smear
Source Honest et.al. BMJ, Aug 2002
34Specimen Collection for FN Testing
- Lightly rotate swab across either the posterior
fornix of the vagina or the ectocervical region
of the external cerical os for 10 seconds.
35Specimen Collection for FN Testing
- Remove swab and immerse Dacron tip in buffer
- Break the shaft even with the top of the tube (at
the score)
36Specimen Collection for FN Testing
- Align the shaft with the hole inside the tube cap
and push down tightly over the shaft to seal the
tube.
37Fetal Fibronectin (FN) Test Results
- Rapid fFN for the TLi System
- Analyzer produces results in23 minutes
- Around-the-clock availability
- Rapid fFN is run like a pregnancy test
- Several sites in Canada run the assay in LD
38Implementation of fFN in insert
province/territory or region
39Conclusion
- Fetal Fibronectin is a useful adjunct to
diagnosis and manage preterm labour - Reduced hospital admission and transfers of women
with symptoms of preterm labour. - Decreased costs associated with hospital
admissions, transfers - Improved identification of women who need
corticosteroid and tocolytic therapy - Provide reassurance to women and families
40Questions?
41Thank you!