Abstract

Routine third trimester ultrasonography is increasingly used to screen for fetal growth restriction. However, evidence regarding its cost-effectiveness is lacking. We aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of routine third trimester ultrasonography to reduce adverse perinatal outcomes compared to usual care (selective ultrasonography). An economic evaluation alongside a stepped-wedge cluster-randomized trial was conducted. Via 60 midwifery practices 12,974 Dutch women aged ≥16 years with low-risk pregnancies were enrolled at 22.8 (SD = 2.4) weeks’ gestation. All practices provided usual care. At 3, 7, and 10 months a third of the practices were randomized to the intervention strategy providing routine ultrasonography at 28–30 and 34–36 weeks’ gestation and usual care. The primary clinical outcome was a dichotomous composite measure of 12 severe adverse perinatal outcomes (SAPO) up to one week postpartum. Information on perinatal care and societal costs was derived from Netherlands Perinatal Registry, hospital records and a survey. Cost-effectiveness analyses revealed no significant differences in SAPO and healthcare and societal costs between the intervention strategy (n = 7026) and usual care (n = 5948). Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves showed that the probability of cost-effectiveness was never higher than 0.6 for all possible ceiling ratios. Adding routine third trimester ultrasonography to usual care is not cost-effective in reducing SAPO.

Highlights

  • We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of routine third trimester ultrasonography in combination with usual care to reduce severe adverse perinatal outcomes in comparison to usual care alone

  • For 12,974 women (96.0% women of the included 13,520 women; 7026 intervention and 5948 usual care), information on pregnancy-related healthcare costs could be retrieved from the Perinatal Registry of the Netherlands (Perined) database and data on the severe adverse perinatal composite outcome were available

  • Of the 2339 maternal and/or neonatal cases (1308 intervention and 1031 usual care) included in an additional in-depth data-collection based on hospital records, cost data were available for 1515 cases (755 intervention and 760 usual care)

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of routine third trimester ultrasonography to reduce adverse perinatal outcomes compared to usual care

Methods
Results
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Conclusion
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