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Multichannel EMG Diagnosing True Preterm Labor (PTL)

P

PreTeL, Inc

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pregnancy Preterm
Labor; Irregular
Preterm Labor

Treatments

Device: Uncertain diagnosis of true labor

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03785795
SBIR1.01

Details and patient eligibility

About

We have designed new electromyography sensors for measuring uterine activity. These sensors are directional - they preferentially report uterine muscle contractions at specific locations, called regions. By measuring the synchronization of the regions of the uterus during contractions we intend to non-invasively determine if any patient is in-labor or not-in-labor. Accurately diagnosing true preterm labor allows timely intervention to avoid preterm birth; Accurately diagnosing false preterm labor avoids needlessly treating patients who would not benefit.

Full description

The legacy device for assessing uterine contractions is the tocodynamometer (Toco). The Toco is plunger-driven device that measures the uterine shape change that occurs with a contraction. Toco only reports the timing of contractions, not the contraction strength, and cannot distinguish between false and true labor.

Our overarching goal is to validate our method of determining if a patient experiencing contractions is in true labor or false labor. We will accomplish this by applying new knowledge to an old technology - uterine EMG.

This trial is based on our advanced understanding of how the uterus generates coordinated contractions without a pacemaker or dedicated electrical conduction pathways - mechanotransduction and intrauterine pressure - but also uses bioelectrical signaling for local tissue recruitment.

The uterus emits bioelectrical signals with each contraction that can be detected by electromyography (EMG). To observe uterine bioelectrical signals, we created a novel EMG sensor, we call the "area sensor". This sensor is directional - capable of preferentially reporting muscle contractions from immediately below the sensor location.

In this clinical trial we use multiple area sensors placed on the maternal abdomen to directly observe how well the regional contractions are synchronized. Our hypothesis to be tested is that highly synchronized contractions predicts true labor, unsynchronized predicts false labor.

Patients with unclear labor status, or those in early labor will be studied. We will correlate the results of the synchronization analysis against the patient's progress over the ensuing 24 hours. These data will validate the ability to identify false and true labor using multichannel EMG and area sensors.

Enrollment

23 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Pregnant
  • One living fetus
  • Experiencing frequent uterine contractions

Exclusion criteria

  • Cervical dilation > 4 cm
  • Ruptured membranes
  • Maternal or fetal indications for immediate delivery

Trial design

23 participants in 1 patient group

Uncertain diagnosis of true labor
Description:
Patients who cannot be accurately classified as experiencing true labor or false labor based on standard clinical assessments.
Treatment:
Device: Uncertain diagnosis of true labor

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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