Long-term development of children born to women with twin pregnancies
treated with cervical pessary or vaginal progesterone: follow-up of a
randomized controlled trial
Abstract
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of cervical pessary and vaginal
progesterone in improving long-term developmental outcomes of children
born to women with twin pregnancies and mid-trimester short cervical
length (CL). Design: Randomized controlled trial (RCT). Setting: My Duc
hospital, Ho Chi Minh City, VietNam. Population: Children born to women
in an RCT comparing cervical pessary and progesterone (NCT02623881).
Methods: At or after 2 years of age, their parents completed a validated
Vietnamese version of Ages & Stages Third Edition Questionnaires
(ASQ-3) and Red flag questionnaire. Main Outcome Measures: Mean ASQ-3
scores, red flag signs, and the composite outcome of perinatal death or
survival with any abnormal ASQ-3 score. Results: In original RCT, we
randomized 300 women to pessary (n=150) or progesterone (n=150). After
counting the number of perinatal death and lost to follow-up, in pessary
group, 116 (82.8%) parents of 229 children returned the questionnaire
versus 118 (82.5%) parents of 232 children in progesterone group. Mean
ASQ-3 scores of the five skills, as well as red flag signs, did not
differ significantly between the two groups. However, the percentage of
children having died or having abnormal ASQ-3 scores in fine motor was
significantly lower in the progesterone group (1.7% vs 6.1%, P=0.01).
In an exploratory analysis, there were no significant differences in the
composite outcome of perinatal death or survival with any abnormal
ASQ-3. Conclusions: Cervical pessary and progesterone have a comparable
effect on developmental outcomes in ≥24 months of children born to women
with twin pregnancies and short CL.