Abstract

We aimed to examine the diagnostic value of colposcopy in a large cohort of pregnant women with unexplained vaginal bleeding during the second or third trimester. This retrospective study included women who underwent colposcopy due to vaginal bleeding in the second and third trimesters during 2012-2022 at a tertiary care hospital. Demographics, obstetric data, bleeding characteristics, colposcopy results, cervical cytology testing, a sonogram directed at the placenta, and birth details were collected. In total, 364 women were included. The mean maternal age was 29.7 years and the mean gestational age at examination was 30.7 weeks. Vaginal bleeding was mild in 80.8%, moderate in 14.6%, and severe in 4.7%. Only 3.3% had been vaccinated against human papilloma virus and 25.5% underwent a Pap smear study before pregnancy. Colposcopy diagnosed the bleeding source in 83 women (22.8%). The colposcopic examination revealed vaginal bleeding due to contact bleeding from ectropion in 46 (12.6%), a decidual/cervical polyp in 37 (10.2%), acetowhite epithelium in 12 (3.3%), herpes genetalis in 2 (0.5%), and bleeding from vaginal varices in 2 (0.5%). Of those who were recommended a follow-up examination after the postpartum period, only 49.1% completed such.Among women with compared to without postcoital bleeding ( N = 72), the risk of abnormal colposcopic findings was higher (24 [33.3%] vs 54 [19.7%], p = .017) and the rate of abnormal Pap smear was higher (7 [13.2%] vs 7 [3.2%], p = .008). Colposcopy can be a valuable diagnostic tool for women with unexplained vaginal bleeding in the second or third trimester.

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