A Review of the Literature: Amniotic Fluid “Sludge”—Clinical Significance and Perinatal Outcomes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Amniotic Fluid “Sludge”: Causes and Its Association with Intra-Amniotic Infection
4. Differential Diagnosis of Amniotic Fluid “Sludge”
5. The Impact of “Sludge” on Women with Short Cervix and It’s Association with Preterm Birth
6. Treatment Options and Their Efficacy
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Correction Statement
Abbreviations
References
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Table 1. Reference (Author and Year) | Type of Study | Population and Study Group Assignment | Cervical Length | Outcomes -Preterm Birth- -Neonatal Outcomes- |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ventura et al. (2011) [3] | Retrospective cohort study | 64 patients included | -Women from the study group delivered earlier than women from the control group -The rate of spontaneous PTB—study group vs control: within 48 h-25% vs. 2.4%; within 7 days-37.5% vs. 11.9%; within 14 days-75% vs. 23.8%; -PROM-in 50% vs. 16.7% -56% of newborns from study group were admitted to NICU vs. 23.8% from the control group | |
16 with AFS—study group | ≤25 mm-in 75% of patients with AFS ≤15 mm-37.5% | |||
48 without AFS—control group | ||||
Hatanaka et al. (2016) [6] | Prospective cohort study | 195 patients | <25 mm-21.2% of cases | -The prevalence of AFS was 25.1% -72 pregnant women were at high risk for preterm birth |
AFS present—49 patients | ||||
Patients without AFS—146 | ||||
Fuchs et al. (2015) [40] | Case control retrospective study | 126 patients | AFS group-48 had a shorter cervix | -Women with AFS delivered earlier than those from control group (p ¼ 0.03) -Smaller weight of neonates at birth (p ¼ 0.007). -A short cervix significantly associated with preterm delivery |
63 patients with AFS—study group | ||||
63 patients without AFS— control group | ||||
Adanir et al. (2018) [41] | Prospective study | 99 pregnant women at high risk for preterm delivery | Sensitivity of presence of AFS or CL ≤ 25 mm was 56% | -The rates of spontaneous PTB in patients with AFS at <37 weeks of gestation were 66.7% -Higher rates of neonatal morbidities in patients with AFS: 50% |
18 patients with AFS | ||||
74 patients without AFS | ||||
Yasuda et al. (2020) [42] | Retrospective study | 54 patients | -Delivery occurred at 28.3 ± 4.5 weeks and 31.7 ± 4.3 weeks in AFS positive patients and AFS-negative patients, respectively -Patients with AFS: 81.8%-chorioamnionitis -Patients without AFS: 20.9% chorioamnionitis -AFS did not significantly affect neonatal complications | |
Tsunoda et al. (2020) [43] | Retrospective cohort study | 110 women (14–30 weeks pregnant and cervical length < 25 mm) | -CL-significantly shorter in the group with AFS than the group without AFS | -Increased risk of PTB in the with AFS -AFS was an independent risk factor for PTB -A significantly increased risk of PTB < 34 weeks in women with CL < 20 mm and <15 mm less than 20 and less than 15 mm |
29 women with AFS | ||||
81 women without AFS | ||||
Pahlavan et al. (2022) [37] | Nested case control Study | 110 pregnant women who undergone IVF procedures | <30 mm–control grup: 10.4% and in study group: 28.6% | -The prevalence of PTB in case and control group were 23.8% and 10.4% -Cerclage-in 7.5% of women from control group and 33.3% in study group |
63 patients—study group—AFS present | ||||
67 patients—control group—normal amniotic fluid | ||||
Suff et al. (2023) [20] | Retrospective cohort study | 147 patients with short cervical length | Women with AFS-more likely to have a short CL, 19 vs. 14 mm | -Women with AFS and short CL ≥ increased risk of mid-trimester loss and delivery <24 weeks of gestation (relative risk, 3.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.2–10.3) -Patients with AFS have increased cervicovaginal interleukin 8 concentrations and fetal fibronectin levels ≥ AFS-an indicator of an inflammatory response -Neonatal outcomes were similar between the two groups |
54 patients with AFS | ||||
93 patients without AFS |
Table 2. Reference (Author and Year) | Type of Study | Population and Study Group Assignment | Antibiotic Scheme | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cuff et al. (2020) [7] | Retrospective cohort study | 97 Patients Included | -Did not reduce the risk of PTB -Did not improve obstetric, neonatal, or pathologic outcomes -PROM-in 33% of women who received antibiotics -PROM in 32.6% of women with no treatment -Cases without sonographic resolution were found to have a shorter CL than those with resolution-39% patients had resolution (12 had been treated and 18 had not) -61% had persistent sonographic evidence of “sludge” (23 had been treated and 24 had not) | |
51 (53%) received oral antibiotics | 46 patients received Azithromycin (500 mg orally on day 1, and 250 mg on days 2–5) 5 patients received Moxifloxacin (400 mg orally daily for 5 days) | |||
46 (47%) were untreated. | ||||
Hatanaka et al. (2019) [47] | Controlled observational study | 86 pregnant women with singleton pregnancies and AFS present at the ultrasound | Women at low risk: Clindamycin 300 mg OA every 6 h + Cephalexin 500 mg OA every 6 h for 7 days Women at high risk: Clindamycin 600 mg IV every 8 h + Cefazolin 1 g IV every 8 h for 5 days + 5 days oral treatment | Antibiotic therapy reduced the incidence of spontaneous PTB at <34 weeks (13.2% vs. 38.5%, p = 0.047) |
64 pregnant women with AFS present-> divided into two subgroups: women at high risk and women at low risk | ||||
22 pregnant women without AFS | ||||
Pustotina et al. (2020) [49] | Prospective Study | 29 patients with AFS | All groups—IV/OA antibiotics + -vaginal antibiotic + oral probiotics for all patients (Clindamycin VA-all patients, 18 patients-butoconazole VA, 16 patients: Cefoperazone + sulbactam IV 8 patients:amoxicillin + clavulonate OA Group IIa: +vaginal progesterone Group IIb: +Indomethacin | -Neonatal complications and preterm birth were prevented in all study groups -Antibiotic therapy eliminated sonographic presence of the “sludge” |
8 women with CL > 25 mm—Group I | ||||
7 women with asymptomatic short cervix—Group IIa | ||||
14 women with short cervix and symptoms—Group IIb | ||||
Jin et al. (2021) [46] | Retrospective cohort study | 58 women at 15–23 weeks of pregnancy (uterine contractions + intact membranes + AFS present at US) | Ceftriaxone Clarithromycin Metronidazole | -Group A—a lower rate of preterm birth and neonatal morbidity -Duration of administration of antibiotics was significantly longer in group A than in group B -51.7% showed a disappearance of AFS with antibiotic treatment |
Group A (30)—disappearance of sludge | ||||
Group B (28)—persistent sludge | ||||
Giles et al. (2023) [45] | Retrospective cohort study | 374 women with/without AFS + cervical length of 15 mm or less at 13–24 weeks of gestation | Azithromycin | -Risk of PTB overall was higher in the treatment group -No differences found for neonatal morbidity |
129 patients received treatment | ||||
245 patients did not received treatment |
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Luca, S.-T.; Săsăran, V.; Muntean, M.; Mărginean, C. A Review of the Literature: Amniotic Fluid “Sludge”—Clinical Significance and Perinatal Outcomes. J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13, 5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13175306
Luca S-T, Săsăran V, Muntean M, Mărginean C. A Review of the Literature: Amniotic Fluid “Sludge”—Clinical Significance and Perinatal Outcomes. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2024; 13(17):5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13175306
Chicago/Turabian StyleLuca, Sonia-Teodora, Vlăduț Săsăran, Mihai Muntean, and Claudiu Mărginean. 2024. "A Review of the Literature: Amniotic Fluid “Sludge”—Clinical Significance and Perinatal Outcomes" Journal of Clinical Medicine 13, no. 17: 5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13175306
APA StyleLuca, S.-T., Săsăran, V., Muntean, M., & Mărginean, C. (2024). A Review of the Literature: Amniotic Fluid “Sludge”—Clinical Significance and Perinatal Outcomes. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 13(17), 5306. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13175306