Medication abortion - UNC School of Medicine
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Transcript Medication abortion - UNC School of Medicine
First Trimester
Bleeding and Abortion
UNC School of Medicine
Obstetrics and Gynecology Clerkship
Case Based Seminar Series
Division of Family Planning
Objectives
Develop a differential for first trimester vaginal bleeding
Differentiate the types of spontaneous abortion (missed,
complete, incomplete, threatened, septic)
Describe the causes of spontaneous abortion
List the management options for spontaneous abortion
Describe reasons for induced abortion
List methods of induced abortion
Understand the public health impact of the legal status of
abortion
Most Common Differential Diagnosis of
1st Trimester Bleeding
Ectopic pregnancy
Normal intrauterine pregnancy
Threatened abortion
Abnormal intrauterine pregnancy
Diagnosis tools for early pregnancy
Urine pregnancy test (UPT)
Accurate on first day of expected menses
β-hCG
6-8 days after ovulation – present
Date of expected menses (@14 days after ovulation)
– βhCG is 100 IU/L
Within first 30 days – β-hCG doubles in 48-72 hours
Important for pregnancy diagnosis prior to
ultrasound diagnosis
Diagnostic tools for early pregnancy
Transvaginal ultrasound
Estimated β-hCG values and associated findings on
transvaginal ultrasound in early pregnancy
EGA
β-hCG (IU/L)
Visualization
5 wks
>1500*
Gestational sac
6 wks
>5,200
Fetal pole
7 wks
>17,500
Cardiac motion
*Discriminatory zone depends partly on resolution of ultrasound used.
Abortion definitions
Definition
Any pregnancy loss before 20 weeks or a fetus < 500 g
Types of abortion
Miscarriage – Also called spontaneous abortion (SAB) or early
pregnancy failure (EPF)
Induced
Consider in any woman of reproductive age with:
Amenorrhea
Bleeding, abdominal pain
Partial expulsion of products of conception, dilated cervix
Uterus smaller than expected
Diagnosis of Spontaneous Abortion (SAB)
or Early Pregnancy Failure (EPF)
SAB/EPF if
Ultrasound measurements are:
> 7mm CRL and no fetal heart rate
> 25mm Mean Sac Diameter and no embryo
Absence of embryo with heartbeat
> 2 weeks after scan showing gestational sac w/o yolk sac
> 11 days after scan showing gestational sac w/ yolk sac
Change in β-hCG is
<35% rise in β-hCG over 48 hours
Doubilet, NEJM 2013
Morse, Fert Ster 2012
Threatened abortion
Signs/
Symptoms
•
•
•
•
•
Closed cervix
Viable fetus
Uterine size = GA
Minimal bleeding
Minimal/no pain
Investigations
• Ultrasound for
viability
• Group & save
Management
• No specific
treatment
Threatened abortion: outcomes
25-50% will progress to spontaneous abortion
However – if the pregnancy is far enough along that an
ultrasound can confirm a live pregnancy then 94% will
go on to deliver a live baby
Types of spontaneous abortion
Inevitable: intrauterine pregnancy with cervical dilation &
vaginal bleeding
Incomplete: cervix open, some tissue has passed
Complete: pregnancy has been expelled completely
Missed: embryo never formed or demised, but uterus has
not expelled the sac
Septic: missed/incomplete abortion becomes infected
Chemical pregnancy: (+)β-hcg but no sac formed
Blighted ovum/anembryonic pregnancy: empty
gestational sac, embryo never formed
Spontaneous abortion:
Epidemiology and etiology
Epidemiology
15-25% of all clinically recognized pregnancies
Offer reassurance: probability of 2 consecutive
miscarriages is 2.25%
85% of women will conceive and have normal third
pregnancy if with same partner
80% in the first 12 weeks
Etiologies
Chromosomal – 50%
Non-chromosomal – 50%
SAB/EPF: Chromosomal Etiologies
50% trisomies
50% triploidy, tetraploidy, X0
SAB/EPF: Non-Chromosomal Etiologies
Maternal systemic disease
Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, lupus, coagulation
disorders
Infectious factors
Brucella, chlamydia, mycoplasma, listeria, toxoplasma,
malaria, tuberculosis
Endocrine factors
Diabetes, hypothyroidism, “luteal phase defect” from
progesterone deficiency
SAB/EPF: Non-Chromosomal Etiologies
Abnormal placentation
Anatomic considerations
fibroids, polyps, septum, bicornuate uterus,
incompetent cervix, Asherman’s
Environmental factors
Smoking >20 cigarettes per day (increased 4X)
Alcohol >7 drinks/week (increased 4X)
Increasing age
Management of spontaneous abortion
1.
Uterine evacuation by suction
Manual
Electric
2. Uterine evacuation by medication
Surgical management SAB/EPF
Manual Vacuum Aspiration
Ensures products of conception (POCs) are fully
evacuated
Minimal anesthesia needed
Comfortable for women due to low noise level
Portable for use in physician office familiar to the
woman
Do not need electricity
Women very satisfied with method
MVA Label. Ipas. 2007.
Surgical management SAB/EPF
Electric Vacuum Aspirator
Electric vacuum aspirator
Uses an electric pump or suction
machine connected via flexible
tubing
Creinin MD, Obstet Gynecol Surv. 2001
Goldberg AB, Obstet Gynecol. 2004
Hemlin J, Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand. 2001
Pain Management
Aspiration/vacuum
Preparation
Music
Support during procedure
Conscious sedation
Paracervical block
Medication abortion
NSAIDS
Oral narcotics and antiemetics if necessary
18
Floating Chorionic Villi
Tissue examination
Basin for POC
Fine-mesh kitchen strainer
Glass pyrex pie dish
Back light or enhanced light
Tools to grasp tissue and POC
Specimen containers
Source: A Clinicians Guide to Medical and Surgical Abortion; Paul M, Grimes D, National Abortion Federation, available online Hyman
AG, Castleman L. Ipas. 2005
Comparison of surgical management
EVA
MVA
Vacuum
Electric pump
Manual aspirator
Noise
Variable
Quiet
Portable
Not easily
Yes
Anesthesia
IV or oral sedation and/or paracervical block
Capacity
350–1,200 cc
60 cc
Assistant
Not necessary
Helpful
Dean G, et al. Contraception. 2003.
EVA and MVA risks
and prevention
Complication
Uterine
perforation
Hemorrhage
Rate/1000
procedures
Prevention
Cervical preparation
1
Intra-Op Ultrasound
<12 wks – 0 Efficient completion of procedure
Retained
products
3
Infection
2.5
Post-abortal
hematometra
1.8
Ultrasound
Gritty texture
Examine POC
Prophylactic antibiotics
PO doxy or IV cephalosporin
N/a – unpredictable
Immediate re-aspiration required
Medication management
of SAB/EPF
Misoprostol
Synthetic prostaglandin E1 analog
Inexpensive
Orally active
Multiple effective routes of administration
Can be stored safely at room temperature
Effective at initiating uterine contractions
Effective at inducing cervical ripening
Regimen
Misoprostol 800 μg vaginally
Repeat dose on day 2 or 3 if indicated
Pelvic U/S to confirm empty uterus
Consider vacuum aspiration if expulsion
incomplete
Zhang J, et al. N Engl J Med. 2005.
Creinin MD, et al. Obstet Gynecol. 2006.
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Efficacy:
Medication vs. Expectant Management
Misoprostol
600 μg
vaginally
Expectant
management
(placebo)
Success by day 2
73.1%
13.5%
Success by day 7
88.5%
44.2%
Evacuation needed
11.5%
55.8%
Bagratee JS, et al. Hum Reprod. 2004.
Induced Abortion/Pregnancy Termination
Language:
Indications
Personal choice
Medical indication
(hemorrhage, infection)
Medical recommendation
(SLE, Pulmonary HTN, PPROM)
Fetus diagnosed with
anomalies
Termination
Abortion
Elective abortion
Therapeutic abortion
Interruption of pregnancy
Definition
The removal of a fetus or
embryo from the uterus before
the stage of viability
Methods
Dependent upon gestational
age and provider abilities
Induced Abortion/Pregnancy Termination
Language:
Indications
Personal choice
Medical indication
(hemorrhage, infection)
Medical recommendation
(SLE, Pulmonary HTN, PPROM)
Fetus diagnosed with
anomalies
Termination
Abortion
Elective abortion
Therapeutic abortion
Interruption of pregnancy
Definition
The removal of a fetus or
embryo from the uterus before
the stage of viability
Methods
Dependent upon gestational
age and provider abilities
26
Induced Abortion History
Any discussion of abortion needs to include some of the
legal and political aspects
Providers should be familiar with the abortion laws in their
own states
Providers performing abortions must know the laws in
their own state
27
Induced Abortion History
1821 – First abortion law enacted in Connecticut
Bars abortion after “quickening”, but definitions vague
1973 – Roe v. Wade
Woman’s constitutional right of privacy
The government cannot prohibit or interfere with abortion
without a “compelling” reason
1976 – Hyde Amendment
Forbids use of federal money to pay for almost any abortion
under Medicaid
Some states have reinstated state funding (NY, VT, CA among
others)
28
Induced Abortion
Epidemiology
1 in 3 women by the age of 44 years
1/3 occur in women older than 24 years
Gestational age:
90% within first 12 weeks
50% within first 8 weeks
Complications
Dependent upon gestational age
7-10 weeks have lowest complication rates
mortality: 1/100,000
Complications are 3-4x higher for second-trimester than first
trimester
29
Earlier Procedures are Safer
Abortions at < 8 weeks = lowest risk of death
1
Gestational Age
Strongest risk factor
for abortion-related
mortality
Weeks Gestation
4
≤8
6
9 to 10
10
61%
18
11 to 12
≤8 weeks
13 to 15
16 to 20
≥21
Bartlet L, et al. Obstet Gynecol. 2004.
30
Putting Induced Abortion
into Perspective…
Incident
Terminating pregnancy < 9 weeks
Chance of death
1 in 500,000
Terminating pregnancy > 20 weeks
1 in 8,000
Giving birth
1 in 7,600
Driving an automobile
1 in 5,900
Using a tampon
1 in 350,000
Gold RB, Richards C. Issues Sci Technol. 1990.; Hatcher RA. Contracept Technol Update. 1998.; Mokdad AH, et al. MMWR Recomm31
Rep. 2003.
Induced Abortion
Methods
Uterine evacuation (basically the same as treatment of
abortion; however, the cervix is closed)
Manual vacuum aspiration
Electric vacuum aspiration
Medication
Mifepristone and misoprostol
Medical abortion
methods
Mifepristone
19-norsteroid that specifically blocks
the receptors for progesterone and
glucocorticosteroids
Antagonizing effect blocks the
relaxation effects of progesterone
Results in uterine contractions
Pregnancy disruption
Dilation and softening of the
cervix
Increases the sensitivity of the
uterus to prostaglandin analogs by
an approximate factor of five
Takes 24-48 hours for this to occur*
Misoprostol
Synthetic prostaglandin E1 analog
Inexpensive
Multiple effective routes of
administration
Can be stored safely at room
temperature
Effective at initiating uterine
contractions
Effective at inducing cervical ripening
Used in decreasing doses as pregnancy
advances
Contraindications to Medical Abortion
• Suspected or confirmed
ectopic pregnancy
• Anemia (Hb < 9.5 g/dL)
• IUCD
• Coagulopathy or use of
anti-coagulants
• Chronic adrenal failure
• Intolerance or allergy to
medications
• Inability to follow
instructions
Medical abortion protocols
1. Mifepristone 200-600 mg orally, administered in clinic
2. Misoprostol 400-800 mcg orally or buccally 24-48h later
3. Evaluate with ultrasound 13-16 days later to confirm completion
Complete abortion rate
(%)
Time to expulsion
(after misoprostol)
91–97
49%–61%
within 4 hours
< 56
83–95
87%–88%
within 24 hours
< 63
88
Gestational age
(days)
< 49
WHO Task Force. BJOG. 2000.; Peyron R, et al. N Engl J Med. 1993.
Spitz IM, et al. N Engl J Med. 1998; Winikoff B, et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1997.
35
2nd Trimester Induced Abortion
Counseling
Discuss pain management
Informed Consent
Discuss contraception – even those with abnormal or
wanted pregnancy may not want to follow immediately
with another pregnancy
Ovulation can occur 14-21 days after a second trimester
abortion; risk of pregnancy is great and must be addressed
Lactation can occur between days 3-7 post-abortion
Procedure
Follow-up
Nyoboe 1990
2nd Trimester Induced Abortion
Epidemiology
Epidemiology
14 weeks gestation and above
96% done by Dilation and Evacuation (D&E)
4% done by labor induction
37
2nd Trimester Induced Abortion
Etiology
Etiology
Social indications
Delay in diagnosis
Delay in finding a provider
Delay in obtaining funding
Teenagers most likely to delay
Fetal anomalies
Genetic such as Trisomy 13, 18, 21
Anatomic such as cardiac defects
Neural tube such as anencephaly
38
2nd Trimester Induced Abortion
Counseling
Discuss pain management
Informed Consent
Discuss contraception – even those with abnormal or
wanted pregnancy may not want to follow immediately with
another pregnancy
Ovulation can occur 14-21 days after a second trimester
abortion; risk of pregnancy is great and must be addressed
Lactation can occur between days 3-7 postabortion
Procedure
Follow-up
Nyoboe et al 1990
39
2nd trimester induced abortion
Management
Dilation and evacuation
Labor induction abortion
Two visits in 1-2 days
Requires inpatient hospital stay
usually lasting 1-3 days
Anesthesia/analgesia required
Average time to delivery 13 hrs
Procedure room required
Increased likelihood of retained
placenta resulting in uterine
evacuation compared to D&E
Skilled surgeon
Medication used misoprostol
and/or mifepristone
Laminaria placement required before
procedure
40
D&E risks and prevention
Complication
Uterine perforation
Hemorrhage
Retained products
Infection
Post-abortal
hematometra
Rate/1000
procedures
1
13-15 wks: 12
17-25 wks: 21
Prevention
Cervical preparation
Intra-Op Ultrasound
Adequate anesthesia
Paracervical block which includes vasopressin 4 units.
Efficient completion of procedure
5-20
Ultrasound, Gritty texture
Examine POC
2.5
Prophylactic antibiotics
PO doxy or IV cephalosporin
1.8
n/a – unpredictable
Immediate re-aspiration required
41
Requirements for a safe D&E Program
Surgeons skilled and experienced in D&E provision
Adequate pain control options with appropriate monitoring
Requisite instruments available
Staff skilled in patient education, counseling, care and
recovery
Established procedures at free standing facilities for
transferring patients who require emergency hospital-based
care
42
2nd trimester induced abortion
• Labor induction
• Dilation & evacuation (D&E)
2nd trimester induced abortion
Management
Dilation and evacuation
Labor induction abortion
Two visits in 1-2 days
Requires inpatient hospital stay
usually lasting 1-3 days
Anesthesia/analgesia required
Average time to delivery 13 hrs
Procedure room required
Increased likelihood of retained
placenta resulting in uterine
evacuation compared to D&E
Skilled surgeon
Medication used misoprostol
and/or mifepristone
Cervical preparation required
before procedure
D&E Step 1
cervical Preparation
Laminaria
Osmotic dilators
Dried compressed seaweed sticks,
5-10mm diameter in size
4-19 dilators can be placed
Slow swelling to exert slow
circumferential pressure and dilation
1-2 days prior to procedure
Paracervical block with 20cc 0.25%
bupivicaine
D&E
Procedure
Adequate anesthesia
Ultrasound guidance
Uterine evacuation using suction and instruments
Paracervical block with 20cc 0.5% lidocaine and
4U vasopressin to decrease blood loss
D&E risks and prevention
Complication
Uterine
perforation
Hemorrhage
Retained
products
Infection
Post-abortal
hematometra
Rate/1000
procedures
Prevention
Cervical preparation
1
Intra-Op Ultrasound
Adequate anesthesia
13-15 wks: 12 Paracervical block which includes
17-25 wks: 21 vasopressin 4 units.
Efficient completion of procedure
Ultrasound, Gritty texture
5-20
Examine POC
Prophylactic antibiotics
2.5
PO doxy or IV cephalosporin
n/a – unpredictable
1.8
Immediate re-aspiration required
Labor Induction Abortion
One office visit – then hospital admission
Hypertonic saline amnioinfusion, intracardiac KCl,
intra-amniotic digoxin to induce fetal death
Misoprostol or misoprostol and mifepristone to cause
contractions and uterine evacuation
20% may require vacuum aspiration for retained
placenta
48
Labor Induction Abortion
Patient is awake
Can obtain analgesia for pain
Fetus delivered intact
Often only option for obese women
49
Bottom Line Concepts
First trimester bleeding occurs in 25% of all pregnancies and 25-50%
will progress to a spontaneous abortion
Etiologies of first trimester bleeding include normal pregnancy,
spontaneous abortion/early pregnancy failure, or ectopic pregnancy.
Diagnosis of normal vs abnormal early pregnancy made using physical
exam and ultrasound and/or ß-hCG
50% of spontaneous abortions are the result of genetic abnormalities
Management of spontaneous abortion can be medical or surgical and
surgical options can be in the operating room or in the clinic
1/3 women will have an induced abortion
Induced abortion before 8 weeks is safest
Risks associated with induced abortion are less than childbirth or
driving a car
Methods for induced abortion include medication or surgical
Case No. 1
24yo woman presents to your office and reports
spotting dark blood for 4 days.
What are your initial history questions?
What steps will you take to make the final
diagnosis?
51
Case No. 1 Continued
On the ultrasound exam you note a CRL consistent with 8
weeks but no cardiac motion.
– What kind of abortion does she have?
– What proportion of clinically recognized pregnancies will end in
spontaneous abortion?
– What proportions of spontaneous abortions are due to
chromosomal abnormalities?
– What are some of the non-chromosomal etiologies of
spontaneous abortion?
– What are her options for management?
– What are the advantages of each option?
52
Case No. 1 alternative
Her BHCG returns as 3200 and a pelvic ultrasound
did not demonstrate an intrauterine pregnancy
What is her likely diagnosis?
What are some risk factors for this
diagnosis?
What are her treatment options?
What would you tell her about future
pregnancies?
53
Case No. 2
27yo with LMP 8 wks ago presents with fever to
101.4, abdominal pain, and vaginal bleeding
What are your initial history questions?
What pertinent findings might you look for
on physical exam?
What is in your differential diagnosis?
54
Case No. 2 Continued
The patient states that she “took a pill to make her
period come down” a couple weeks ago and has had
spotting ever since. The fever started last night, and
the bleeding is now heavier. On exam, her os is
open and she has purulent discharge. She also has
fundal tenderness.
What medication did she take
What kind of abortion does she have?
What risk factors does she have for this diagnosis?
What are her options for management?
55
Case No. 3
A 32 year-old comes into your office. She had a positive
pregnancy test at home, reconfirmed in the office today.
What will be some of the first history questions you ask
her?
56
Case No. 4
A 20 year old patient reports her last period was 8 weeks
ago. She has taken two home pregnancy tests that have
been positive. She is crying because she says she cannot
be pregnant now.
What will be some of the first history questions you ask
her?
What are her management options for induced
abortion?
57
Case No. 5
A 38 year-old G1P0 with an IVF pregnancy at 16wks
presents to discuss the results of her recent fetal survey,
which shows fetal anencephaly. You know that most
anencephalic fetuses do not survive birth.
How do you counsel this patient?
What are her options for management?
What questions do you ask her to help her make a
decision for management?
How would you counsel the patient if the ultrasound
showed features consistent with Trisomy 21 instead of
anencephaly?
58
References and Resources
Additional references not included in slides:
APGO Medical Student Educational Objectives, 9th edition, (2009),
Educational Topic 16 (p34-35), 34 (72-73)
Beckman & Ling: Obstetrics and Gynecology, 6th edition, (2010),
Charles RB Beckmann, Frank W Ling, Barabara M Barzansky, William
NP Herbert, Douglas W Laube, Roger P Smith. Chapter 13 (p147-150).
Hacker & Moore: Hacker and Moore's Essentials of Obstetrics and
Gynecology, 5th edition (2009), Neville F Hacker, Joseph C Gambone,
Calvin J Hobel. Chapter 7 (p74-78).
These slides were modified from the original slides created by Jennifer
Tang, MD and Erika Levi, MD.