RTI Health Solutions, Research Triangle Park, NC.
Kaiser Permanente Washington, Seattle, WA; University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021 Jun;224(6):599.e1-599.e18. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2021.01.003. Epub 2021 Jan 15.
Intrauterine devices are effective and safe, long-acting reversible contraceptives, but the risk of uterine perforation occurs with an estimated incidence of 1 to 2 per 1000 insertions. The European Active Surveillance Study for Intrauterine Devices, a European prospective observational study that enrolled 61,448 participants (2006-2012), found that women breastfeeding at the time of device insertion or with the device inserted at ≤36 weeks after delivery had a higher risk of uterine perforation. The Association of Uterine Perforation and Expulsion of Intrauterine Device (APEX-IUD) study was a Food and Drug Administration-mandated study designed to reflect current United States clinical practice. The aims of the APEX-IUD study were to evaluate the risk of intrauterine device-related uterine perforation and device expulsion among women who were breastfeeding or within 12 months after delivery at insertion.
We aimed to describe the APEX-IUD study design, methodology, and analytical plan and present population characteristics, size of risk factor groups, and duration of follow-up.
APEX-IUD study was a retrospective cohort study conducted in 4 organizations with access to electronic health records: Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Kaiser Permanente Southern California, Kaiser Permanente Washington, and Regenstrief Institute in Indiana. Variables were identified through structured data (eg, diagnostic, procedural, medication codes) and unstructured data (eg, clinical notes) via natural language processing. Outcomes include uterine perforation and device expulsion; potential risk factors were breastfeeding at insertion, postpartum timing of insertion, device type, and menorrhagia diagnosis in the year before insertion. Covariates include demographic characteristics, clinical characteristics, and procedure-related variables, such as difficult insertion. The first potential date of inclusion for eligible women varies by research site (from January 1, 2001 to January 1, 2010). Follow-up begins at insertion and ends at first occurrence of an outcome of interest, a censoring event (device removal or reinsertion, pregnancy, hysterectomy, sterilization, device expiration, death, disenrollment, last clinical encounter), or end of the study period (June 30, 2018). Comparisons of levels of exposure variables were made using Cox regression models with confounding adjusted by propensity score weighting using overlap weights.
The study population includes 326,658 women with at least 1 device insertion during the study period (Kaiser Permanente Northern California, 161,442; Kaiser Permanente Southern California, 123,214; Kaiser Permanente Washington, 20,526; Regenstrief Institute, 21,476). The median duration of continuous enrollment was 90 (site medians 74-177) months. The mean age was 32 years, and the population was racially and ethnically diverse across the 4 sites. The mean body mass index was 28.5 kg/m, and of the women included in the study, 10.0% had menorrhagia ≤12 months before insertion, 5.3% had uterine fibroids, and 10% were recent smokers; furthermore, among these women, 79.4% had levonorgestrel-releasing devices, and 19.5% had copper devices. Across sites, 97,824 women had an intrauterine device insertion at ≤52 weeks after delivery, of which 94,817 women (97%) had breastfeeding status at insertion determined; in addition, 228,834 women had intrauterine device insertion at >52 weeks after delivery or no evidence of a delivery in their health record.
Combining retrospective data from multiple sites allowed for a large and diverse study population. Collaboration with clinicians in the study design and validation of outcomes ensured that the APEX-IUD study results reflect current United States clinical practice. Results from this study will provide valuable information based on real-world evidence about risk factors for intrauterine devices perforation and expulsion for clinicians.
宫内节育器是一种有效且安全的长效可逆避孕方法,但据估计,其穿孔的风险为每 1000 次插入 1 至 2 次。欧洲主动监测宫内节育器研究(European Active Surveillance Study for Intrauterine Devices)是一项欧洲前瞻性观察性研究,共纳入 61448 名参与者(2006-2012 年),研究发现,在插入宫内节育器时正在母乳喂养或在分娩后≤36 周插入宫内节育器的女性,穿孔的风险更高。宫内节育器穿孔和脱落的关联研究(Association of Uterine Perforation and Expulsion of Intrauterine Device,APEX-IUD)是一项食品和药物管理局授权的研究,旨在反映当前美国的临床实践。APEX-IUD 研究的目的是评估母乳喂养或分娩后 12 个月内插入宫内节育器的女性中与宫内节育器相关的穿孔和脱落的风险。
我们旨在描述 APEX-IUD 研究的设计、方法和分析计划,并介绍研究人群的特征、风险因素组的大小和随访时间。
APEX-IUD 研究是一项回顾性队列研究,在 4 个可以访问电子健康记录的组织中进行:加州 Kaiser Permanente 北部、加州 Kaiser Permanente 南部、华盛顿 Kaiser Permanente 和印第安纳州 Regenstrief 研究所。通过结构化数据(例如诊断、程序、药物代码)和非结构化数据(例如临床笔记)通过自然语言处理来识别变量。结果包括穿孔和脱落;潜在的危险因素包括插入时母乳喂养、产后插入时间、节育器类型和插入前 1 年的月经过多诊断。协变量包括人口统计学特征、临床特征和与手术相关的变量,如插入困难。符合条件的女性的第一个潜在纳入日期因研究地点而异(从 2001 年 1 月 1 日至 2010 年 1 月 1 日)。随访从插入开始,直到首次出现感兴趣的结果(如,穿孔、脱落、妊娠、子宫切除术、绝育、节育器过期、死亡、退出、最后一次临床就诊)或研究期结束(2018 年 6 月 30 日)为止。使用 Cox 回归模型,通过倾向评分加权调整混杂因素,使用重叠权重调整暴露变量的水平。
研究人群包括 326658 名在研究期间至少有一次宫内节育器插入的女性(加州 Kaiser Permanente 北部 161442 名,加州 Kaiser Permanente 南部 123214 名,华盛顿 Kaiser Permanente 20526 名,Regenstrief 研究所 21476 名)。连续入组的中位时间为 90 个月(各站点中位数 74-177 个月)。平均年龄为 32 岁,四个站点的人群在种族和民族方面差异较大。平均体重指数为 28.5kg/m,研究人群中 10.0%的女性在插入前 12 个月内有月经过多,5.3%的女性有子宫肌瘤,10%的女性是最近的吸烟者;此外,这些女性中 79.4%使用的是含左炔诺孕酮的节育器,19.5%使用的是含铜的节育器。在各个站点中,有 97824 名女性在分娩后≤52 周内进行了宫内节育器插入,其中 94817 名(97%)女性在插入时的母乳喂养状态确定;此外,还有 228834 名女性在分娩后 52 周或在其健康记录中没有分娩证据时进行了宫内节育器插入。
通过多个站点的回顾性数据合并,允许进行一个大的、多样化的研究人群。在研究设计和结果验证方面与临床医生合作,确保了 APEX-IUD 研究结果反映了当前美国的临床实践。本研究的结果将根据真实世界的证据,为临床医生提供有关宫内节育器穿孔和脱落风险因素的有价值信息。