Abstract
To evaluate the relationship between umbilical artery cord gas values and fetal tolerance of labor, as reflected by Apgar score. We hypothesized the existence of wide biological variability in fetal tolerance of metabolic acidemia, which, if present, would weaken one fundamental assumption underlying the use of electronic fetal heart rate (FHR) monitoring. We conducted a retrospective cohort study of term, singleton, nonanomalous fetuses delivered in our institution between March 2012 and July 2020. Universally obtained umbilical cord gas values and Apgar scores were extracted. We calculated Spearman correlation coefficients and receiver operating characteristic curves for various levels of umbilical artery pH, base excess, and Apgar scores. We analyzed data from 29,787 deliveries. The statistical correlation between umbilical artery pH and base excess and both 1- and 5-minute Apgar scores was weak or nonexistent in all pH range subgroups (range 0.064-0.213). Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis suggested umbilical artery pH value of 7.22 yields the best discrimination for prediction of a severely depressed newborn (5-minute Apgar score less than 4), but sensitivity and specificity for this predictive value remains poor to moderate. The use of electronic FHR monitoring is predicated on a documented relationship between FHR patterns and umbilical artery pH, and an assumed correlation between pH and fetal outcomes, reflecting fetal tolerance of labor and delivery. Our data demonstrate a weak-to-absent correlation between metabolic acidemia and even short-term fetal condition, thus significantly weakening this latter assumption. No amount of future modification of FHR pattern interpretation to better predict newborn pH is likely to lead to improved newborn outcomes, given this weakness in a fundamental assumption on which FHR monitoring is based.
Published Version
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