C-STICH2: Emergency Cervical Cerclage to Prevent Miscarriage and Preterm Birth - a Randomised Controlled Trial

Clinical trial management team researching existing and novel medical interventions, drugs and procedures.  

The group work on a non-CTIMP C-Stich 2 which is researching if the placement of an emergency cervical cerclage reduces the risk of pregnancy loss vs expectant management and associated complications from the surgery and follow up babies health and wellbeing at 2 year post-randomisation. The trial is open in 35 maternity hospitals across the United Kingdom. 

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Katie MorrisProfessor Katie Morris

Research Group Lead

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Project description

Objectives:

  • To determine if an emergency cervical cerclage (ECC) reduces pregnancy loss (miscarriage, termination of pregnancy, stillbirth or neonatal death within 7 days of delivery) in women who present with cervical dilatation sufficient to allow exposure of the unruptured, fetal membranes at or below the level of the external os between 16+0 and 27+6 weeks.

  • To follow up all surviving babies to 2 years of age to determine general health and medium term neurodevelopmental outcomes.

  • To determine the complication rates at ECC:

    • Including the number of women who suffer iatrogenic rupture of membranes during the procedure.
    • The rate of insertion failure in women allocated to have an ECC inserted.
    • To explore predictors of successful ECC placement such as magnitude of dilatation.

Trial Design:

A randomised controlled, multicentre trial (RCT) with an internal pilot, a nested qualitative process evaluation and cost-effectiveness analysis. Following the internal pilot and nested qualitative evaluation a prospective observational cohort study was developed to run alongside the RCT.

Participant Population and Sample Size for RCT:

Pregnant women presenting at 16+0 ‑ 27+6 weeks, with premature cervical dilatation and exposed, unruptured fetal membranes will be invited to take part in a RCT of ECC vs no cervical cerclage. 

  • Setting: Maternity units within the UK.
  • Sample size: up to 260 women.

Observational Cohort

Consented observational cohort added following pilot review. This will supplement effectiveness evaluation. The inclusion and exclusion criteria for the cohort remains the same as the RCT. All outcome measures collected in the RCT will be collected in the observational cohort including the two year outcomes.

Current projects

Meet the team

Research Team Leads:

Co-Investigator:

  • Dr Victoria Hodgetts-Morton

Postdoctoral researcher:

  • Dr Nicole Pilarski

Opportunity to be involved in research

Pregnant women presenting at 16+0 ‑ 27+6 weeks, with premature cervical dilatation and exposed, unruptured fetal membranes.

  • Setting: Maternity units within the UK.
  • Sample size: up to 260 women.

Funding

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The C-STICH2 trial is funded by The National Institute for Health Research through their Health Technology Assessment funding stream.

Contact us

Research Group Lead: Professor Katie Morris

Email: R.K.Morris@bham.ac.uk 

Telephone: 0121 623 6652

 

Research Group Lead: Kirandeep Sunner

Email: k.k.sunner@bham.ac.uk

Telephone: 0121 415 9136

 

Trial Team: C-Stich2@trials.bham.ac.ukMDS-c-C-Stich2@adf.bham.ac.uk 

Telephone: 0121 4143902