Objective

To determine incidence, risk indicators, and outcomes of emergency peripartum hysterectomy (EPH) in Metro East, Cape Town, South Africa.

Methods

A population-based district-wide prospective descriptive study of EPH in public hospitals from November 2014 to November 2015. Women were enrolled by using the WHO maternal near miss tool and followed until discharge. EPH was defined as hemorrhage or infection leading to hysterectomy during pregnancy or within 42 days of delivery.

Results

Fifty-nine women experienced EPH with an overall incidence of 14.3 per 10 000 women: 32 procedures were for postpartum hemorrhage, 27 for puerperal sepsis. Two women died: one from sepsis; one from hemorrhage. Overall, 51 (86%) women delivered by cesarean, and 23/51 (45%) by repeat cesarean. As compared with hemorrhage, EPH for sepsis involved older women (mean age, 31.5 vs 24.4 years) and those with higher gravidity (median, 3 vs 1), and was associated with longer hospital admission (median, 11.5 vs 4 days), with occurrence later postpartum (median, 8 vs 0 days), and more frequently with complications.

Conclusions

The incidence of EPH for sepsis was higher than previously reported. Repeat cesarean was strongly associated with EPH. Clinical characteristics of sepsis-related EPH compared unfavorably with those of hemorrhage-related EPH.

© 2019 The Authors. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics.

Overview publication

TitleA district-wide population-based descriptive study of emergency peripartum hysterectomy in a middle-income country.
DateJuly 1st, 2019
Issue nameInternational journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics
Issue numberv146.1:103-109
DOI10.1002/ijgo.12837
PubMed31055843
AuthorsHeitkamp A, Seinstra J, van den Akker T, Vollmer L, Gebhardt S, van Roosmalen J, de Vries JI & Theron G
KeywordsEmergency peripartum hysterectomy, High-risk pregnancy, Maternal mortality, Maternal near miss, Maternal sepsis, Obstetric surgery, Postpartum hemorrhage, Quality of obstetric care
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