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Willem M Ankum a Department of
Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Academic Medical Centre, University of
Amsterdam, PO Box 22700, 1100 DE Amsterdam, Netherlands, b Department of
General Practice, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam
Correspondence to: W M Ankum w.m.ankum{at}amc.uva.nl
In many parts of the Western world there is a strong
preference among gynaecologists to rely on surgical evacuation for the management of miscarriages in the first trimester. Why so many specialists have adopted surgery as the standard procedure seems determined by custom and habit and rooted in history rather than being
an evidence based choice. During the first half of the 20th century the
high rate of infections from retained products of conception with
ensuing mortality from septicaemia Expectant management finds its main protagonists in general
practice, where the process of spontaneous miscarriage is acknowledged more readily as being a well regulated natural process in human reproduction.
Relatively new is the medical approach to spontaneous
miscarriages.3 The combination of the antiprogestogen
mifepristone and the prostaglandin analogue misoprostol is being used
successfully for the termination of pregnancies on a large scale. The
use of these substances has also been tried in the management of
spontaneous miscarriage.
Doctors and patients are confronted with a situation where opinions
about the proper management of spontaneous miscarriage differ widely.
That the available options are so diverse makes it even more complex.
This paper aims to increase the awareness of various management options
and explores the available evidence.
We performed a search of Medline, Embase, the Cochrane Library,
and PubMed to identify relevant literature, using spontaneous abortion
and spontaneous miscarriage as primary search conditions for titles and
abstracts. We carried out a crossover search from the obtained articles.
In 1989 the Dutch College of General Practitioners issued a
practice guideline based on the expectant management of spontaneous miscarriage. A revised guideline, issued in 1997, confirmed expectant management as the strategy of first choice.
4 5
Several
observational studies from the United Kingdom, Canada, and the
United States have also advocated expectant management by doctors as a
feasible option.6-8 These studies showed that a major
proportion of women with spontaneous miscarriages These studies neither allow any conclusions about the differences
between expectant and surgical management nor between the management in
primary and secondary care, as it is likely that more serious
cases were referred to hospital. They do, however, illustrate that
expectant management is being practised widely in primary care, even in
communities with a high rate of surgical intervention in the hospital environment.
Several hospital based randomised controlled trials comparing the
various management options for spontaneous miscarriage are now
available and provide more solid ground for management decisions. The
table summarises the results of these
trials.
often complications from criminal
attempts to terminate a pregnancy
resulted in the policy of immediate
surgical evacuation whenever a diagnosis of inevitable abortion was
made.1 Today these complications are rare, and their role
in the justification of a universal tendency to perform surgery has
therefore expired.2
Summary points
Surgical evacuation is unnecessary after a complete miscarriage
with retained products of conception and should be indicated by
clinical rather than ultrasonographical criteria
Expectant management is used in general practice on a large scale and
is more feasible than surgical evacuation
Medical management has no apparent benefits over expectant
management, and it has side effects
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Methods
Top
Methods
Studies from primary care
Hospital based studies
References
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Studies from primary care
Top
Methods
Studies from primary care
Hospital based studies
References
a quarter in the
United Kingdom and almost half in the North American studies
were
managed successfully by doctors, either in the general practice or at
home. Additionally, these studies showed that virtually all women under
specialist care were bound to undergo surgical evacuation. Through an
education programme focusing on both doctors and patients in Vancouver, British Columbia, surgical evacuations were reduced from 46% to 32%,
and the incidence of complications even decreased during the
study.9
![]()
Hospital based studies
Top
Methods
Studies from primary care
Hospital based studies
References

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Natural course of miscarriage, with opportunities for
intervention
Expectant management versus surgical evacuation
Nielsen and Hahlin published the first randomised study, which
compared expectant management
during a period of three days
with
surgical evacuation.10 They included women with inevitable
and incomplete abortions with anterior-posterior diameters greater than
15 mm at ultrasonography. Success rates and complication rates were
similar in both groups, as was the duration of vaginal bleeding, pain,
sick leave, and packed cells volume after 3 and 14 days. Two more
recent papers from this study showed no differences in psychological
reactions and in subsequent fertility between both cohorts of
women.
11 12
Medical treatment versus surgical evacuation
De Jonge et al compared medical treatment (a single dose of
the prostaglandin analogue misoprostol) with surgical
evacuation.14 Women with inevitable miscarriages on clinical grounds were included. Several women were stabilised before
randomisation: in each treatment arm about one third received blood
transfusions. Medical treatment was considered successful if a complete
miscarriage occurred within 12 hours. Only 3 of 23 patients (13%) were
treated successfully with misoprostol compared with 26 of 27 patients
(96%) allocated to surgery. Haemoglobin concentrations decreased
significantly in women treated medically but were stable in those
treated surgically. The study was discontinued after the present
(interim) analysis. Patients entered in this study were apparently
different from those in the other reports summarised in this paper. The
fairly large uterine size (mean 13 weeks) and considerable proportion
of women requiring blood transfusions before randomisation probably
explain the high failure rate of medical treatment in this
study.
|
Expectant management versus medical treatment
Nielsen et al were the first to explore the efficacy of expectant
versus medical management in a randomised trial of women with
spontaneous miscarriages in the first trimester.18 Women
were either managed expectantly or received mifepristone followed by
misoprostol 48 hours later. After five days, women with
ultrasonographical evidence of retained products of conception greater
than 15 mm underwent surgical evacuation. Success rates were similar in
both groups, as were pain scores, vaginal bleeding, complications, and
scores for patient satisfaction. Convalescence was 1.8 days longer
after medical treatment.
Observational studies
Two observational hospital based studies are of special interest:
a non-randomised study, performed by Cheung et al, provides detailed
information about short term complications in a large series of
patients.19 Women with complete abortions (n=297) were
managed expectantly, whereas those showing retained products of
conception on ultrasonography (n=470) were treated surgically.
Treatment complications after surgery occurred in 6% of women: two
cervical lacerations and four uterine perforations, for which two
laparoscopies were done, whereas another patient needed an emergency
hysterectomy for uncontrollable pelvic bleeding. Short term
complications in those managed expectantly occurred in only 3% of
women and were less severe, but the difference did not reach
significance compared with those treated primarily by surgery.
Conclusion
Although miscarriage is the most common problem in pregnancy, the
available evidence on its management is extremely limited. A
considerable proportion of women with spontaneous miscarriages is being
managed expectantly by doctors, even in communities where virtually all
patients under secondary care are treated by surgical evacuation.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: None.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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(Accepted 19 February 2001)
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