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Umbilical Cord Milking on the Reduction of Red Blood Cell Transfusion Rates in Infants

Eastern Virginia Medical School (EVMS) logo

Eastern Virginia Medical School (EVMS)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Prematurity

Treatments

Procedure: Umbilical Cord Milking

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01523769
EasternVMC

Details and patient eligibility

About

Delayed cord clamp of at least 30 seconds in neonates under 37 weeks has shown that these infants have higher circulating blood volume in the first 24 hours, less need for blood transfusions, and less incidence of intraventricular hemorrhage. Delayed umbilical cord clamping has also been shown to increase the initial hematocrit and decrease the need for red blood cell (RBC) transfusions compared with no intervention in infants born between 27 and 33 weeks' gestation. However, a delay in cord clamping of 30-45 seconds may theoretically interfere with neonatal resuscitation. There have been few studies that addressed the active milking of the cord and its effect on neonatal resuscitation. Active milking of the umbilical cord towards the baby prior to clamping (rather than passive) should take less than 5 seconds to perform and should not interfere with neonatal resuscitation. Umbilical cord milking, as an alternative to delayed cord clamping, has been shown to increase the circulatory blood volume expressed as the hemoglobin value. Active milking of the cord prior to clamping, however, is not considered standard of care and only 1 Japanese randomized control study has reported that umbilical cord milking reduces the need for RBC transfusions, thus reducing the number of infants requiring a RBC transfusion as compared with control conditions. Our study aims to test the hypothesis that active milking of the umbilical cord will reduce the need for transfusion in preterm infants.

Full description

The proposed design is a randomized controlled trial. Pregnant women at risk for delivering a singleton preterm infant between 24 and 28 weeks gestation will be randomized prior to delivery into one of two treatment arms. Common reasons for needing to be delivered at this early gestational age include but are not limited to: preterm labor not responding to tocolytic medications, incompetent cervix with cervical dilation and no contractions, clinical chorioamnionitis requiring delivery for maternal/fetal benefit, severe preeclampsia, severe growth restriction with a non-reassuring fetal heart rate tracing. The first arm will include active milking of the umbilical cord toward the neonate's umbilicus prior to cord clamping at delivery while the second arm will not include this intervention and will have their respective cord immediately clamped in the usual fashion post delivery (control).

Enrollment

113 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Singleton pregnancy
  • Delivery anticipated between 24 and 28+6 weeks gestation
  • There is enough time from admission to anticipated delivery to properly obtain consent from the patient

Exclusion criteria

  • Multifetal gestation
  • Antenatally diagnosed major congenital anomaly
  • Known Rh sensitized pregnancy
  • Hydrops fetalis (any etiology)
  • Known positive maternal Parvovirus titers
  • Elevated peak systolic velocity of the fetal Middle Cerebral Artery (MCA)
  • Clinical suspicion of placental abruption at delivery due to excessive maternal bleeding or uterine hypertonicity
  • Maternal age under 18

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

113 participants in 2 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Control group, the cord was not milked
Umbilical Cord Milking
Experimental group
Description:
Approximately 10 cm of umbilical cord was milked toward the baby immediately following delivery
Treatment:
Procedure: Umbilical Cord Milking

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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