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Immune and Physical Recovery Following Cesarean Delivery

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Stanford University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cesarean Delivery

Treatments

Procedure: Elective cesarean delivery

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pregnancy results in an altered immune state compared to the nonpregnant population. A significant proportion of women undergoing cesarean delivery recover poorly. The first step to determining whether this is an immune driven / associated process is to characterise what effects this surgery has on maternal immune function. "Normal" changes will be evaluated in maternal immune function and activity precipitated by surgery and delivery of the neonate. Immune response to surgery will be compared to historical immune data from patients undergoing non-obstetric surgery (orthopaedic patients).

Full description

Variations will be evaluated in baseline and postpartum leukocyte subset distribution and singling pathways within leukocyte subsets (including response to surgery) in women undergoing elective cesarean delivery compare to patients undergoing nonobstetric surgery (orthopaedic data from a completed study). This will help to determine whether baseline immune function and response to trauma (surgery) is the same in the pregnant and non-pregnant states. Women will also be evaluated for clinical recovery parameters using validated scoring measures and objective measurement of physical activity through use of a smartwatch (actigraph) around the peripartum period. This information is of significant importance as it brings us one step closer to identifying immune mechanisms that may be involved in or associated with poorer postpartum recovery.

Aim- to determine whether perioperative immune function can predict women who are likely to have delayed physical recovery or recover poorly as demonstrated by lower scores on subjective clinical questionnaires and collected via watch actigraphy. This will help to determine whether a pre-existing deficient immune state is responsible for a worse recovery profile, which could be identified preoperatively. Similarly whether an impairment in response to surgery is demonstrable, which predisposes women to worse recovery profiles will be evaluated.

Ultimately, earlier identification of at-risk parturients (for example, through a preoperative bedside test) may lead to earlier interventions / patient centred care, in an attempt to improve their recovery trajectory and patient experience.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • elective cesarean delivery at Lucile Packard Hospital
  • age >20 to <50 years old,
  • single pregnancy term
  • gestational age 37-41 weeks pregnancy,
  • elective cesarean delivery,
  • spinal or combined spinal-epidural anesthesia as primary anesthesia mode,
  • multimodal analgesia regimen (including intrathecal morphine and regular acetaminophen and NSAIDs), single center at Stanford.
  • ASA grade 1 or 2.
  • gestational diabetes (not requiring insulin or diabetes medications and pre-eclampsia (without severe features) will be included.
  • ethnic background: all ethnic backgrounds will be included gender: pregnant women only

Exclusion criteria

  • refusal to participate

Trial design

60 participants in 1 patient group

Cesarean patients
Description:
participants undergoing elective cesarean will have measures of recovery assessed (patient-reported outcome measures and activity data from watch)
Treatment:
Procedure: Elective cesarean delivery

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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