Phipps Hala, Osborn David A, Zhang Rongming, Cooper Chris, Hyett Jon, de Vries Bradley S
Susan Wakil School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Sydney Institute for Women, Children and their Families, Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, Australia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2025 Jul 18;7(7):CD009298. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009298.pub3.
Manual rotation of the fetal head for women with fetal malpresentation (occipital posterior (OP) or occipital transverse (OT)) is commonly performed to increase the chances of normal vaginal delivery and is perceived to be safe. Prophylactic manual rotation has the potential to prevent operative delivery and caesarean section, and reduce obstetric and neonatal complications. This review updates a previous 2014 Cochrane review.
To assess the effect of prophylactic manual rotation compared to no manual rotation for women with malposition in labour on mode of delivery, and maternal and neonatal outcomes.
We searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, three other databases and three trial registries in March 2024. We reviewed the reference lists of retrieved studies.
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), quasi-randomised or cluster-randomised clinical trials comparing prophylactic manual rotation in labour for fetal malposition versus expectant management, augmentation of labour or operative delivery were eligible. Participants included women at term or preterm, (< 37 weeks' gestation) planning a vaginal birth with a cephalic singleton fetal malposition in labour. We defined prophylactic manual rotation as rotation performed without immediate instrumental vaginal delivery. We excluded non-randomised studies, and studies comparing manual rotation as part of a multi-component intervention without the ability to isolate the effect.
Critical outcomes were operative delivery (forceps or vacuum delivery or caesarean section), maternal and perinatal mortality, caesarean section, instrumental delivery (forceps or vacuum delivery), third- or fourth-degree perineal trauma and postpartum haemorrhage of 500 mL or more.
Two review authors independently assessed RCTs for inclusion and extracted data. Two review authors independently evaluated the risk of bias using the Cochrane risk of bias (RoB 1, version 5.2) tool.
We analysed dichotomous data using a random effects model and presented the results as summary risk ratios (RRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). We also assessed the certainty of the evidence using the GRADE approach.
The review included six RCTs in Australia, France and the USA, recruiting a total of 1002 participants. We judged the overall risk of bias to be low for three RCTs (444 participants). We assessed the other three RCTs (558 participants) to have a high risk of performance and detection bias as they did not blind the control group. All RCTs included pregnant women in labour ≥ 37 weeks gestation with a singleton pregnancy at full cervical dilatation. A single study enrolled only nulliparous women. The majority of women (> 80%) had epidural analgesia. Four RCTs enrolled women in the OP position, one RCT enrolled women in the OT position, and one RCT enrolled women in both the OP and OT positions. All confirmed fetal position using ultrasound.
Findings from six RCTs involving 1002 participants suggest that manual rotation, compared to no manual rotation, may result in little to no difference in the rates of operative delivery (RR 0.92, 95% CI 0.81 to 1.04; low-certainty evidence); caesarean section (RR 1.09, 95% CI 0.76 to 1.56; low-certainty evidence); instrumental delivery (RR 0.88, 95% CI 0.75 to 1.03; low-certainty evidence); third- or fourth-degree perineal trauma (RR 0.91, 95% CI 0.55 to 1.49; low-certainty evidence); and postpartum haemorrhage of 500 mL or more (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.71 to 1.25; low-certainty evidence). There was no maternal or perinatal mortality. A single subgroup analysis for caesarean delivery comparing nulliparous versus multiparous deliveries found evidence of an interaction. Neither subgroup showed evidence of a difference in caesarean delivery. No other subgroup analyses showed evidence of an interaction, including comparisons of occiput posterior versus occiput transverse position; nulliparous versus multiparous deliveries; and digital (fingers) versus whole-hand rotation. Due to the risk of bias (lack of blinding) and imprecision in three studies, we downgraded the certainty of evidence to low. One additional study is ongoing but may be underpowered to detect important differences.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Currently, we are uncertain whether prophylactic manual rotation early in the second stage of labour prevents operative delivery for women with fetal malpresentation. Further appropriately designed trials are required to determine the efficacy of manual rotation in both low-middle income and high-income settings.
This Cochrane review had no dedicated funding.
The protocol for this Cochrane review is available at: https//doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD009298. The previous version of this Cochrane review is available at: https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD009298.pub2.
对于胎位异常(枕后位(OP)或枕横位(OT))的女性,手动旋转胎头通常用于增加正常阴道分娩的几率,且被认为是安全的。预防性手动旋转有可能预防手术分娩和剖宫产,并减少产科和新生儿并发症。本综述更新了2014年的上一篇Cochrane综述。
评估与不进行手动旋转相比,预防性手动旋转对分娩时胎位异常的女性分娩方式、孕产妇及新生儿结局的影响。
我们于2024年3月检索了Cochrane中心对照试验注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE及其他三个数据库和三个试验注册库。我们查阅了检索到的研究的参考文献列表。
随机对照试验(RCT)、半随机或整群随机临床试验,比较分娩时针对胎位异常进行预防性手动旋转与期待治疗、引产或手术分娩,符合条件。参与者包括足月或早产(妊娠<37周)、计划经阴道分娩且分娩时为头位单胎胎位异常的女性。我们将预防性手动旋转定义为在未立即进行器械阴道分娩的情况下进行的旋转。我们排除了非随机研究,以及将手动旋转作为多成分干预的一部分进行比较且无法分离其效果的研究。
关键结局指标为手术分娩(产钳或真空吸引分娩或剖宫产)、孕产妇和围产期死亡率、剖宫产、器械分娩(产钳或真空吸引分娩)、三度或四度会阴裂伤以及500毫升及以上的产后出血。
两位综述作者独立评估纳入的RCT并提取数据。两位综述作者使用Cochrane偏倚风险(RoB 1,第5.2版)工具独立评估偏倚风险水平。
我们使用随机效应模型分析二分数据,并将结果表示为具有95%置信区间(CI)的汇总风险比(RR)。我们还使用GRADE方法评估证据的确定性。
该综述纳入了澳大利亚、法国和美国的六项RCT,共招募了1002名参与者。我们判断三项RCT(444名参与者)的总体偏倚风险较低。我们评估其他三项RCT(558名参与者)存在较高的实施和检测偏倚风险,因为它们未对对照组进行盲法处理。所有RCT均纳入妊娠≥37周、单胎妊娠、宫颈完全扩张的分娩期孕妇。一项研究仅纳入初产妇。大多数女性(>80%)接受了硬膜外镇痛。四项RCT纳入枕后位的女性,一项RCT纳入枕横位的女性,一项RCT纳入枕后位和枕横位的女性。所有研究均使用超声确认胎位。
六项涉及1002名参与者的RCT结果表明,与不进行手动旋转相比,手动旋转在手术分娩率(RR 0.92,95%CI 0.