Objective

To compare guidelines from eight high-income countries on prevention and management of postpartum haemorrhage (PPH), with a particular focus on severe PPH.

Design

Comparative study.

Setting

High-resource countries.

Population

Women with PPH.

Methods

Systematic comparison of guidance on PPH from eight high-income countries.

Main outcome measures

Definition of PPH, prophylactic management, measurement of blood loss, initial PPH-management, second-line uterotonics, non-pharmacological management, resuscitation/transfusion management, organisation of care, quality/methodological rigour.

Conclusions

Our study highlights areas where strong evidence is lacking. There is need for a universal definition of (severe) PPH. Consensus is required on how and when to quantify blood loss to identify PPH promptly. Future research may focus on timing and sequence of second-line uterotonics and non-pharmacological interventions and how these impact maternal outcome. Until more data are available, different transfusion strategies will be applied. The use of clear transfusion-protocols are nonetheless recommended to reduce delays in initiation. There is a need for a collaborative effort to develop standardised, evidence-based PPH guidelines.

Results

Definitions of (severe) PPH varied as to the applied cut-off of blood loss and incorporation of clinical parameters. Dose and mode of administration of prophylactic uterotonics and methods of blood loss measurement were heterogeneous. Recommendations on second-line uterotonics differed as to type and dose. Obstetric management diverged particularly regarding procedures for uterine atony. Recommendations on transfusion approaches varied with different thresholds for blood transfusion and supplementation of haemostatic agents. Quality of guidelines varied considerably.

© 2023 The Authors. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Overview publication

TitlePostpartum haemorrhage in high-resource settings: Variations in clinical management and future research directions based on a comparative study of national guidelines.
DateDecember 1st, 2023
Issue nameBJOG : an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Issue numberv130.13:1639-1652
DOI10.1111/1471-0528.17551
PubMed37259184
Authorsde Vries PLM, Deneux-Tharaux C, Baud D, Chen KK, Donati S, Goffinet F, Knight M, D'Souzah R, Sueters M & van den Akker T
Keywordsclinical guidelines, obstetric haemorrhage, postpartum haemorrhage
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