Maternal Outcome After Conservative Treatment of Placenta Accreta Loïc Sentilhes, MD, Clémence Ambroselli, MD, Gilles Kayem, MD, PhD, Magali Provansal, MD, Hervé Fernandez, MD, PhD, Franck Perrotin, MD, PhD, Norbert Winer, MD, PhD, Fabrice Pierre, MD, PhD, Alexandra Benachi, MD, PhD, Michel Dreyfus, MD, PhD, Estelle Bauville, Dominique Mahieu-Caputo, MD, PhD, Loïc Marpeau, MD, PhD, Philippe Descamps, MD, PhD, Franc¸ois Goffinet, MD, PhD, and Florence Bretelle, MD, PhD OBJECTIVE: To estimate maternal outcome after conservative management of placenta accreta. METHODS: This retrospective multicenter study sought to include all women treated conservatively for placenta accreta in tertiary university hospital centers in France from 1993 to 2007. Conservative management was defined by the obstetrician’s decision to leave the placenta in situ, partially or totally, with no attempt to remove it forcibly. The primary outcome was success of conservative treatment, defined by uterine preservation. The secondary outcome was a composite measure of severe maternal morbidity including sepsis, septic shock, peritonitis, uterine necrosis, fistula, injury to adjacent organs, acute pulmonary edema, acute renal failure, deep vein thrombophlebitis or pulmonary embolism, or death. RESULTS: Of the 40 university hospitals that agreed to participate in this study, 25 institutions had used conservative treatment at least once (range 1– 46) and had For a list of participating centers and collaborators associated with this study, see the Appendix online at http://links.lww.com/AOG/A157. From the Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Angers University Hospital, Angers; Rouen University Hospital, Charles Nicolle, Rouen; Rennes University Hospital, Rennes; Maternité Port-Royal Hospital, Cochin APHP, University René Descartes, Paris; Centre Hospitalier Intercommunal de Créteil, University of Paris XII, Henri Mondor, Créteil; Conception Hospital, University of Mediterranee, Marseille; North Hospital, University of Mediterranee, Marseille; Antoine Béclère Hospital, University Paris Sud, Paris; Kremlin-Bicètre Hospital, University Paris Sud, Paris; Tours University Hospital, Tours; Nantes University Hospital, Nantes; CHU La Milétrie Hospital, University of Poitiers, Poitiers; Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades, University René Descartes, Paris; Caen University Hospital, Caen; and Hôpital Bichat Claude-Bernard, APHP, University Paris-VII, Paris, France. Corresponding author: Dr. Loïc Sentilhes, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Angers University Hospital, 4, rue Larrey, 49000 Angers, France; e-mail: [email protected]. Financial Disclosure The authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest. © 2010 by The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISSN: 0029-7844/10 526 VOL. 115, NO. 3, MARCH 2010 MD, treated a total of 167 women. Conservative treatment was successful for 131 of the women (78.4%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 71.4 – 84.4%); of the remaining 36 women, 18 had primary hysterectomy and 18 had delayed hysterectomy (10.8% each, 95% CI 6.5–16.5%). Severe maternal morbidity occurred in 10 cases (6.0%, 95% CI 2.9 –10.7%). One woman died of myelosuppression and nephrotoxicity related to intraumbilical methotrexate administration. Spontaneous placental resorption occurred in 87 of 116 cases (75.0%, 95% CI 66.1– 82.6%), with a median delay from delivery of 13.5 weeks (range 4 – 60 weeks). CONCLUSION: Conservative treatment for placenta accreta can help women avoid hysterectomy and involves a low rate of severe maternal morbidity in centers with adequate equipment and resources. (Obstet Gynecol 2010;115:526–34) LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II P lacenta accreta, broadly defined here to include placenta increta and percreta, is a life-threatening condition defined as abnormal attachment of a part of or the entire chorionic plate to the myometrium, secondary to a defect in the decidua basalis or fibrinous Nitabuch layer. Morbidity associated with placenta accreta is mainly caused by massive hemorrhage and by surgical attempts to remove the uterus, which cause intraoperative and postoperative maternal morbidity associated with large-volume blood transfusions, intraabdominal infection, ureteral damage, and fistula formation.1,2 Mortality rates as high as 7% are reported to be associated with placenta percreta.1 The rising incidence of cesarean deliveries combined with increasing maternal age has resulted in a 10-fold increase in the incidence of placenta accreta over the past 50 years: reported rates today in developed countries range from as low as 1 per 2,500 to as high as 1 per 530 deliveries.3,4 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY The three primary options for managing placenta accreta are the cesarean hysterectomy, and the extirpative and conservative approaches. The extirpative approach involves forced manual removal of the placenta in an attempt to obtain an empty uterus.5–7 It should be avoided because it is associated with higher rate of massive postpartum hemorrhage than either cesarean hysterectomy2,7 or the conservative approach6,8 and with a higher rate of subsequent peripartum hysterectomy than the conservative approach.6,8 The cesarean hysterectomy is generally considered the standard treatment for placenta accreta. The hysterectomy is performed after cesarean delivery of the fetus and there is normally no attempt to detach the placenta.7,9 This option may reduce maternal morbidity,10 but by definition it leaves women sterile. Accordingly, conservative treatment may be applied for some women who want to be able to have more children. In this approach, the placenta adhering either partially or totally to the myometrium is left in situ, either after the failure of a prudent manual attempt at placental removal or no attempt at all.6,7 Its advantage is the potential preservation of a functional uterus that may allow subsequent uneventful pregnancies.11,12 The conservative approach may also be safest in cases of placenta percreta, in particular when the bladder is involved, for it may reduce severe maternal morbidity, such as ureteral injury, cystotomy, and urinary fistula, in comparison with cesarean hysterectomy.13–15 It nevertheless remains controversial for it may expose the patient to the risk of intraabdominal infection and especially major bleeding.7 To date, only very limited data about maternal outcome after conservative management of placenta accreta are available. Because our current knowledge is mainly based on case reports and short case series,6,8 the frequency and type of severe adverse events associated with this approach remain unknown.7 Moreover, these case series mainly come from individual tertiary-care institutions, diminishing their generalizability.6,8 The aim of this study was to estimate maternal outcome after conservative management of placenta accreta in a large multicenter cohort. MATERIALS AND METHODS This French multicenter retrospective study was approved by the national Ethics Committee (Comite´ d’Ethique de la Recherche en Obste´trique et Gynecologie). Of 45 university tertiary hospital centers in France, 40 agreed to participate and retrieved data from their databases for women who had conserva- VOL. 115, NO. 3, MARCH 2010 tive management for placenta accreta from January 1993 through December 2007. The maternal outcome of some of these women has been reported earlier in two previous case series.6,8 As previously reported,6 placenta accreta was diagnosed according to the following clinical and histologic criteria: 1) manual removal of the placenta partially or totally impossible and no cleavage plane between all or part of the placenta and uterus, 2) prenatal diagnosis of placenta accreta, confirmed by the failure of gentle attempts to remove it during the third stage of labor, 3) evidence of gross placental invasion at the time of surgery, 4) histologic confirmation of accreta on a hysterectomy specimen. Women treated with an extirpative approach or a cesarean hysterectomy were excluded from this study. Conservative management in case of placenta accreta was defined by the decision of the obstetrician to leave the placenta partially or totally in situ, with no attempt to remove it forcibly. When placenta accreta was not suspected before delivery, it was diagnosed when it was impossible to detach the placenta by gentle manipulation, and conservative treatment left part or all of it in the uterus. Cases for which placenta accreta was strongly suspected before labor because of history or imaging findings were usually discussed in staff meetings. When considered appropriate, women were offered the possibility of conservative treatment in an informative discussion. Although the hospitals did not have a common written protocol at that time, or even necessarily their own written protocol, the practitioner or institution or both generally chose one of two options: 1) to leave the entire placenta in situ, hoping to reduce the risk of subsequent hemorrhage by making no attempt to remove the placenta, or 2) to attempt prudent delivery of the placenta, applying moderate cord traction to reduce the risk of leaving a normal placenta in situ (except when placenta percreta was strongly suspected). At the obstetrician’s discretion and depending on the circumstances and course, additional treatment could include uterotonic drugs (oxytocin or sulprostone or both), prophylactic antibiotic therapy, methotrexate, preoperative ureteric stent placement, balloon catheter occlusion, and uterine devascularization procedure such as pelvic arterial embolization, surgical vessel ligation (uterine or hypogastric artery ligation, stepwise uterine devascularization), or uterine compression sutures (B-Lynch and Cho sutures). Stepwise uterine devascularization, as previously reported by AbdRabbo,16 consisted of normal and low bilateral uterine artery ligation, fol- Sentilhes et al Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta 527 25 Conservative treatment for placenta accreta Cases (n) 20 15 10 5 8 9 133 07 20 06 20 Sentilhes et al 11 10 05 20 04 528 03 lowed by bilateral utero-ovarian ligament ligation when bleeding persisted.17–19 The investigators sent an e-mail stating the goal of the study to all obstetrics professors and chairs of obstetrics departments in French university hospitals. All participating hospitals collect data prospectively every day and record it in a computerized database, which may differ from one hospital to another. Midwives and residents enter data during hospitalization, immediately after delivery, and later for subsequent events. The hospitals searched their databases for 1993–2007 using the following key words to identify cases: placenta previa, placenta accreta, placenta percreta, postpartum hemorrhage, and peripartum hysterectomy. The hospitals then retrieved the paper files for each patient. An independent investigator (C.A.) carefully examined the clinical notes from all files to exclude cases that met the exclusion criteria and to collect data about the women’s characteristics and history, risk factors for and prenatal diagnosis of placenta accreta, type of delivery and conservative treatment, additional treatments, blood transfusion, immediate complications, and outcome. The primary outcome was success of conservative treatment, defined as uterine preservation, ie, the absence of either primary or delayed hysterectomy due to placenta accreta. The secondary outcome was a composite score for severe maternal morbidity, defined as any of the following: sepsis, septic shock, peritonitis, uterine necrosis, postpartum uterine rupture, fistula, injury to adjacent organs, acute pulmonary edema, acute renal failure, deep vein thrombophlebitis or pulmonary embolism, or maternal death. A postpartum hemorrhage was defined as bleeding requiring medical or interventional treatment and was 7 20 20 02 20 01 99 97 00 20 7 20 4 98 6 19 19 96 94 95 19 19 93 3 1 2 19 1 19 1 19 0 Fig. 1. Annual number of cases receiving conservative treatment for placenta accreta during the study period. The numbers in white correspond to the number of centers offering conservative treatment each year during the study period. Sentilhes. Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta. Obstet Gynecol 2010. considered primary if it occurred within the first 24 hours of delivery and secondary if it occurred more than 24 hours after delivery. Similarly, a primary hysterectomy was due to placenta accreta and took place within the first 24 hours, whereas a delayed hysterectomy took place more than 24 hours after delivery. Sepsis was defined by a positive blood culture; septic shock also required vasopressors to reverse sepsis-induced hypotension.20 Acute renal failure was defined by the need for dialysis. Descriptive characteristics were calculated for the variables of interest. Statistical analysis included determination of rates with their 95% confidence intervals (CIs) and was conducted with StatXact.4 (Cytel Software Corporation, Cambridge, MA). RESULTS Of the 45 university hospitals in France, 40 (88.9%) agreed to participate in the study and 25 reported to have used conservative treatment for placenta accreta at least once. Of the 311 women with placenta accreta, 144 (46.3%) were excluded from the study because they were treated by an extirpative approach (n⫽91) or cesarean hysterectomy (n⫽53). The study population thus included 167 women from 25 university hospitals (62.5%). Each center included a median of three (range 1 to 46) cases. The first conservative treatment took place in 1993, and the number of procedures increased regularly each year, reaching 25 in 2007 (Fig. 1). At least one risk factor for placenta accreta was identified in 160 women (95.8%) (Table 1). Table 2 summarizes the patients’ demographic and obstetric characteristics. Ultrasound findings suggestive of placenta accreta were observed in 74 of the 167 cases (44.3%) and in 40 of the subgroup of 53 Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Table 1. Risk Factors for Placenta Accreta Risk Factor Previous abortion or miscarriage One curettage Two or more curettages Previous uterine surgery Myomectomy* By hysteroscopy By laparotomy Polypectomy* Endometrectomy* Synechia* Metroplasty* Previous cesarean delivery One Two or more Previous accreta Previous endometritis Age 35 y or older Placenta previa At least one risk factor Placenta Accreta (nⴝ167) 66 (39.5) 54 (32.3) 12 (7.2) 33 (19.8) 11 (6.6) 6 (3.6) 5 (3.0) 4 (2.4) 1 (0,6) 5 (3.0) 5 (3.0) 90 (53.8) 48 (28.7) 42 (25.1) 6 (3.6) 3 (1.8) 64 (38.3) 87 (52.1) 160 (95.8) Data are n (%). * The total number of previous uterine surgical procedures exceeds the number of patients because some patients had more than one uterine surgery. women (75.5%) who had both placenta previa and a previous cesarean. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the pelvis was performed for 45 patients and confirmed the diagnosis of placenta accreta in Table 2. Patients’ Demographic and Obstetric Characteristics Characteristic Age (y) Geographic origin European Sub-Saharan Africa North Africa Asia Parity Number of pregnancies Twin pregnancy Pregnancy termination Gestational age at delivery (wk) Less than 24 24–31 32–36 37 or more Mode of delivery Planned cesarean Emergency cesarean due to hemorrhage Cesarean during labor Vaginal Placenta Accreta (nⴝ167) 33.15⫾4.78 122 (73.0) 23 (13.8) 18 (10.8) 4 (2.4) 1 (0–8) 3 (1–12) 6 (3.6) 5 (3.0) 34.5⫾4.75 8 (4.8) 34 (20.4) 39 (23.3) 86 (51.5) 113 (67.6) 27 (23.9) 26 (15.6) 28 (16.8) Data are mean⫾standard deviation, n (%), or median (range). VOL. 115, NO. 3, MARCH 2010 41 (91.1%). A cesarean delivery was planned for all the cases diagnosed prenatally (n⫽74). In all, 113 cesarean deliveries were planned. For 27 (23.9%) of these patients, cesarean nonetheless was performed on an emergency basis before labor because of hemorrhaging. Peripartum management and modalities of conservative treatment are summarized in Table 3. Primary postpartum hemorrhage occurred in 86 of 167 cases (51.5%). In 15 of these cases (17.4%), it stopped after the administration of uterotonic agents and no other treatment. In the other 71 cases, primary postpartum hemorrhage required uterine devascularization procedures (n⫽57) or primary hysterectomy (n⫽18) or both. There were 109 uterine devascularization procedures including pelvic arterial embolization combined with conservative treatment (Table 3), 57 (52.3%) for primary postpartum hemorrhage and 52 (47.7%) prophylactic, ie, in absence of any primary postpartum hemorrhage. Table 3. Peripartum Management and Modalities of Conservative Treatment for Patients With Placenta Accreta, Including Placenta Percreta Characteristic Hysterotomy (n⫽139) Fundal Low transverse Placenta left in situ Partially Entirely Preoperative ureteric stent placement Uterotonic administration Primary postpartum hemorrhage No additional uterine devascularization procedure Additional uterine devascularization procedure Pelvic arterial embolization* Vessel ligation* Stepwise uterine devascularization Hypogastric artery ligation Stepwise uterine devascularization and hypogastric artery ligation Uterine compression suture* Balloon catheter occlusion Methotrexate administration Placenta Accreta, Including Percreta (nⴝ167) 71 (51.1) 68 (48.9) 167 (100) 99 (59.3) 68 (40.7) 6 (3.6) 167 (100) 86 (51.5) 58 (34.7) 109 (65.3) 62 (37.1) 45 (26.9) 15 (9.0) 23 (13.8) 7 (4.2) 16 (9.6) 0 21 (12.6) Data are n (%). * The total number of additional uterine devascularization procedures exceeds the number of patients because some patients had more than one such procedure. Sentilhes et al Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta 529 Table 4 summarizes maternal morbidity for the entire cohort. Conservative treatment for placenta accreta was successful in 131 of 167 cases (78.4%, 95% CI 71.4 – 84.4%); 18 patients (10.8%, 95% CI 6.5– 16.5%) had primary hysterectomies, related in all cases to primary postpartum hemorrhage, and another 18 (10.8%, 95% CI 6.5–16.5%) delayed hysterectomies (Table 4). Histopathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of placenta accreta in all primary hysterectomies and all except one delayed hysterectomy. Severe maternal morbidity was identified in 10 cases (6.0%, 95% CI 2.9 –10.7%), including one maternal death due to aplasia, nephrotoxicity with acute renal failure, and then peritonitis with septic shock after intraumbilical cord administration of methotrexate (50 mg per m2 of body-surface area) (Table 5). Follow-up information about the subsequent outcome of the placenta was available for 116 of the 131 (88.5%) women with successful conservative treatment. In 75% (95% CI 66.1– 82.6%) of the cases (87/116), spontaneous placental resorption was observed on follow-up examination, at a median of 13.5 weeks (range 4 – 60 weeks) after delivery. Hysteroscopic resection or curettage or both were used to remove the retained placenta in 29 (25.0%) cases, at a median of 20 weeks (range 2– 45 weeks) after delivery. Placenta percreta was diagnosed before labor by ultrasonography or MRI (n⫽14) and during labor (at the time of the cesarean) (n⫽4) in 18 women. Bladder involvement was observed for eight of these 18 women, five of whom had had prenatal ultrasonography and MRI, all at least suggestive of this complication. The mean gestational age at delivery for the 18 women with placenta percreta was 35.3 weeks (range 29.2– 40.1 weeks). The entire placenta was left in situ after a fundal hysterotomy in all cases. Additional uterine devascularization procedures were performed in 13 cases (eight pelvic arterial embolizations and five vessel ligations). Three patients received a dose of methotrexate—in situ in two cases and intramuscularly in the other. Four primary hysterectomies were performed owing to hemorrhage (one complicated by bladder injury [Tables 4 and 5]). Delayed hysterectomies were performed at a median duration of 39 days (range 9 –105 days) after delivery because of secondary postpartum hemorrhage (one case), secondary postpartum hemorrhage and sepsis (one case), vesicouterine fistula (one case), and arteriovenous malformation (one case). No ureteral damage occurred. Conservative treatment was thus successful for 10 of 18 cases (55.6%, 95% CI 30.8 –78.5%) of placenta 530 Sentilhes et al Table 4. Maternal Morbidity After Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta, Including Placenta Percreta Placenta Accreta, Including Percreta (nⴝ167) Characteristic Primary hysterectomy Cause of primary hysterectomy Primary postpartum hemorrhage Postpartum prophylactic antibiotic therapy more than 5 d Transfusion patients Units of packed RBCs transfused more than 5 Transfer to intensive care unit Duration of stay in intensive care unit (d) Acute pulmonary edema Acute renal failure Adjacent organ injury Septic shock Sepsis* Infection Endometritis Wound infection Peritonitis Pyelonephritis Vesicouterine fistula Uterine necrosis Isolated postpartum fever higher than 38.5°C for 24 h Deep vein thrombophlebitis or pulmonary embolism Secondary postpartum hemorrhage stopped after Uterotonics Manual exploration of the uterus Hysteroscopy and curettage Pelvic arterial embolization Delayed hysterectomy Delayed hysterectomy Median interval from delivery to delayed hysterectomy (d) Cause of delayed hysterectomy Secondary postpartum hemorrhage Sepsis Secondary postpartum hemorrhage and sepsis Vesicouterine fistula Uterine necrosis and sepsis† Arteriovenous malformation Maternal request Death Success of conservative treatment Severe maternal morbidity 18 (10.8) 18/18 (100) 54 (32.3) 70 (41.9) 25 (15.0) 43 (25.7) 2.36⫾1.93 1 (0.6) 1 (0.6) 1 (0.6) 1 (0.6) 7 (4.2) 47 (28.1) 15 (9.0) 8 (4.7) 2 (1.2) 2 (1.2) 1 (0.6) 2 (1.2) 17 (10.2) 3 (1.8) 18 (10.8) 2/18 (11.1) 2/18 (11.1) 2/18 (11.1) 4/18 (22.2) 8/18 (44.5) 18 (10.8) 22 (9–45) 8/18 (44.4) 2/18 (11.1) 3/18 (16.7) 1/18 (5.6) 2/18 (11.1) 1/18 (5.6) 1/18 (5.6) 1 (0.6) 131 (78.4) 10 (6.0) RBC, red blood cell. Data are n (%), mean⫾standard deviation, or median (interquartile range). Some patients had more than one type of morbidity. * Sepsis included sepsis and septic shock. † These two patients had bilateral supraselective embolization of the uterine arteries owing to primary postpartum hemorrhage on the day of delivery. Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Table 5. Characteristics of the Women With Severe Maternal Morbidity Type Term Placenta Uterine of Abnormal Mode of (Weeks of Left in Primary Devascularization Case Placentation Delivery Gestation) Situ Hemorrhage Procedure MTX 1 Accreta CD 37 Entirely No PAE No 2 Percreta with bladder involvement CD 37 Entirely Yes PAE⫹BL No 3 Accreta VD 37 Partially Yes PAE Yes 4 Accreta CD 6 Partially Yes PAE No 5 Percreta CD 38 Entirely Yes HAL No 6 Percreta with bladder involvement CD 39 Entirely Yes No No 7 Accreta CD 39 Partially Yes HAL No 8 Accreta CD 37 Partially Yes BL No 9 10 Accreta Accreta CD CD 30 32 Entirely Entirely Yes No PAE PAE No Yes Severe Maternal Morbidity Delayed hysterectomy on day 45 because of sepsis and peritonitis Delayed hysterectomy on day 105 because of vesicouterine fistula and excision of the tract and reinforcement of the repair with a graft; this patient subsequently complained of irritable bladder symptoms. Delayed hysterectomy on day 23 because of uterine necrosis and sepsis Delayed hysterectomy on day 9 because of uterine necrosis and sepsis complicated by deep vein thrombophlebitis Delayed hysterectomy on day 9 because of sepsis and hemorrhage complicated by acute pulmonary edema Bladder injury during primary hysterectomy with no long-term sequela Delayed hysterectomy on day 2 because of sepsis and hemorrhage complicated by deep vein thrombophlebitis Delayed hysterectomy on day 3 because of sepsis Pulmonary embolism Aplasia, nephrotoxicity with acute renal failure, followed by peritonitis with septic shock and hemorrhage requiring delayed hysterectomy on day 9; maternal death occurred on day 126 related to multiorgan failure CD, cesarean delivery; PAE, pelvic arterial embolization; BL, B-Lynch suture; VD, vaginal delivery; HAL, hypogastric artery ligation; MTX, methotrexate. percreta, and severe maternal morbidity occurred in 3 of the 18 (16.7%, 95% CI 3.6 – 41.4%) (Table 5). Histopathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of placenta percreta in all primary and delayed hysterectomies. Of the eight cases of placenta per- VOL. 115, NO. 3, MARCH 2010 creta with bladder involvement, one primary hysterectomy (complicated by bladder injury) and one delayed hysterectomy (owing to vesicouterine fistula) were required: conservative treatment was successful in six cases (75%, 95% CI 34.9 –96.8%) and severe Sentilhes et al Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta 531 maternal morbidity occurred in two (25%, 95% CI 3.2– 65.1%). DISCUSSION This multicenter study of conservative management of placenta accreta in 167 women treated in 25 French university hospitals showed that conservative treatment for placenta accreta is a valuable option with a success rate of 78.4% and a severe maternal morbidity rate of 6.0%. The main strengths of this study include not only the number of cases but also the number of participating centers, which increases the study’s external validity and makes it possible to extrapolate our results to centers with limited experience in conservative treatment of placenta accreta. Nevertheless, all our cases were managed in university teaching hospitals, where blood banks, pelvic arterial embolizations, obstetric subspecialties, obstetric anesthesia, interventional radiology, urology, and gynecological oncology were readily available. Therefore, our results can be extrapolated only to centers with similar equipment and resources. Two case series have assessed conservative treatment of placenta accreta, for a limited number of patients.6,8 As stated in the Material and Methods section, these women were also included in this study, so comparison of our results to these studies is inappropriate. Surprisingly, our rates of patients requiring transfusion, transfer to intensive care unit, infectious complications, and delayed re-operations were similar to those reported in the largest series of cesarean hysterectomies for placenta accreta/percreta.2 Nevertheless, this comparison too is inappropriate, as the rate of placenta percreta, a condition that is associated with higher morbidity,1 was 10.7% in our study, a little more than half that in the study of cesarean hysterectomies by Eller et al (18.4%).2 Nonetheless, until a randomized controlled trial is performed, we believe that cesarean hysterectomy without attempted placental removal should be strongly considered for placenta accreta in multiparous women not interested in preserving their fertility,9 especially given that conservative treatment requires patient adherence to treatment over a long postpartum period. In particular, the median period until delayed hysterectomy in our series was 22 weeks (interquartile range, 9 – 45), which suggests that women may continue to be at risk for severe bleeding or infection for weeks or even months after delivery. Methotrexate has been proposed as adjuvant treatment to improve the success rate of conservative treatment and hasten the postpartum involution of the 532 Sentilhes et al placenta.7 Nevertheless, no standard dosing regimen exists, and the mode of administration (in situ, intramuscular, or intraumbilical) varies widely according to author.6 – 8,21 No convincing evidence currently supports the efficacy of methotrexate in cases of placenta accreta left in situ, and methotrexate-related pancytopenia and nephrotoxicity are possible adverse effects.22,23 In these women who might subsequently need uterine devascularization (embolization or ligation or both) or develop severe and potentially lifethreatening infection, use of methotrexate therapy seems to be inappropriate. In particular, intraumbilical-cord administration should be avoided because of the risk of toxic accumulation of methotrexate. The only maternal death observed in our study occurred after methotrexate administration into the umbilical cord and severe methotrexate-related adverse events. In our study, some practitioners performed additional uterine devascularization procedures in absence of any hemorrhage to improve the maternal outcome and decrease the risk of secondary postpartum hemorrhage.24 Nevertheless, no evidence currently proves the benefit of this strategy.17,25 Similarly, several authors advocate the preoperative placement of ureteric stents or occlusive balloon catheters or both in the internal iliac arteries to reduce, respectively, the rate of ureteric injury2 and the volume of blood loss.26 The interest of these strategies is still being debated.27–29 It is very likely, however, that the most useful intervention for improving maternal outcome is scheduling delivery2 with an experienced obstetric surgeon, an anesthesiologist skilled in obstetric anesthesia, and with other surgical specialists (such as urologists) readily available if required.7 Prenatal identification of placenta accreta is therefore essential for planning delivery but also for counseling women about the possibilities of management of placenta accreta. No recommendation can be made about the optimal gestational age of delivery, because the potential maternal benefits of earlier scheduled delivery must be weighed against the consequence of premature birth on a case-by-case basis.2 Interestingly, in our study, 27% of the women for whom cesarean delivery was planned because of prenatal diagnosis of placenta accreta nonetheless had emergency cesarean deliveries because of early hemorrhage. This finding emphasizes the need for contingency plans for possible emergency delivery. The rate of severe maternal morbidity was 25% (2/8) for placenta percreta with bladder involvement and 16.7% (3/18) for all cases of placenta percreta. No ureteral damage occurred in this latter subgroup. There were only two urologic complica- Conservative Treatment for Placenta Accreta OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY tions (one bladder injury and one vesicouterine fistula). In comparison, a meta-analysis of 54 reported cases of placenta percreta with bladder involvement treated by conventional surgical therapy reported a high maternal morbidity with 39 urologic complications.30 These included bladder laceration (20%), urinary fistula (13%), ureteral transection (6%), and small capacity bladder (4%). Partial cystectomy was necessary in 24 cases (44%) and there were three maternal deaths (5.6%).30 We speculate that conservative treatment in cases of placenta percreta with bladder involvement may have the advantage of avoiding a difficult hysterectomy fraught with risks including urologic complications, in an acutely bleeding patient. Several limitations of our study must be underlined. The first is its retrospective design, common to all studies that have thus far assessed maternal outcome after placenta accreta. Accordingly, all the flaws of retrospective analyses apply. In particular, some eligible cases may not have been detected, especially insofar as databases may differ from one hospital to another. Second, the length of the observation period raises concerns about possible changes in management and outcome during this time. Third, it is possible that some cases did not have a placenta accreta, because pathological confirmation was impossible in cases without a hysterectomy specimen, generally unavailable except when treatment fails. Nevertheless, our results reflect what happens in real life when a team decides to perform conservative treatment for placenta accreta. Fourth, although this study includes a large number of cases that had conservative treatment of placenta accreta, the series may lack statistical power to estimate adequately the risks of rare severe events, such as death. In conclusion, in centers with adequate equipment and resources, conservative management is an option for patients who are properly counseled and motivated, in particular, for women who want the option of future pregnancy and who agree to close follow-up monitoring. Nevertheless, there are significant risks of serious morbidity and possibly mortality associated with conservative management. REFERENCES 1. O’Brien JM, Barton JR, Donaldson ES. The management of placenta percreta: conservative and operative strategies. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1996;175:1632– 8. 2. Eller AG, Porter TF, Soisson P, Silver RM. Optimal management strategies for placenta accreta. BJOG 2009;116:648 –54. VOL. 115, NO. 3, MARCH 2010 3. Wu S, Kocherginsky M, Hibbard JU. Abnormal placentation: twenty-year analysis. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2005;192: 1458 – 61. 4. Miller DA, Chollet JA, Goodwin TM. Clinical risk factors for placenta previa-placenta accreta. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1997; 177:210 – 4. 5. 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