Misoprostol (Cytotec) for Labor
Induction: A Cautionary Tale
by Marsden Wagner, MD, MSPH
© 1999 Midwifery Today, Inc. All Rights
Reserved.
[Editor's note: This
article first appeared in
Midwifery Today, No. 49 - Spring 1999.]
Check out the Mother Jones' article
"Cytotec and Forced Labor."
In this issue of Midwifery Today Jennifer Enoch
presents an excellent, thorough review of the use of misoprostol
(Cytotec) for induction (1). A careful reading of this paper,
however, raises a number of urgent questions: Misoprostol is on
the market as a prescription drug because the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) has approved misoprostol for stomach
problems, but not for induction of labor. Why not? What does the
FDA say about this "off-label" use? What does the company
manufacturing the drug say about this use? What do the
scientific data show, and what do scientists say about this
ongoing off-label use? A brief review of the evolution of the
use of misoprostol for induction clearly illustrates several
problems related to obstetric and midwifery practice in the
United States.
|
|
Issue 49
Theme: Bridging the Gap
A thorough look at the use of
misoprostol (Cytotec) gives readers some very
compelling things to think about. |
In South Dakota three months ago, an obstetrician bragged to
me over lunch that he had introduced into his community the use
of Cytotec for induction. When questioned, he admitted knowing
the FDA does not approve such use of this drug but that
nevertheless he does not inform women it is not approved for
induction, nor does he ask for their informed consent. He
scoffed at my suggestion that he is experimenting on women
without their knowledge, much less consent. His excuse: "We will
wait forever for the bureaucrats in Washington, D.C., at the FDA
to approve drugs, so we must try them out ourselves if we want
progress."
One month later, in Oregon, a local doctor told me (and
repeated it on her local weekly TV Health program)
that obstetricians in Medford told her they are thrilled with
Cytotec for induction because they can bring women in first
thing in the morning, give them Cytotec and have the babies out
before 5 p.m.—a welcome return to daylight obstetrics. None of
the hospitals in the Medford area required informed consent when
using Cytotec for induction. The Oregon State Health Department
told me that while collecting their statewide data on induction,
they have observed that Cytotec has now become the most common
method of induction.
While the United States has a system in place to ensure that
all drugs must be evaluated by the FDA before being allowed on
the market and that certain drugs are to be dispensed only
through physician prescription, there is a hole in this system.
Once a drug has been approved by the FDA for one use and put on
the market, there is nothing to prevent a physician from using
that drug for whatever use he wants and at any dosage. Trials
for new uses of drugs are important as long as the trials are
done as research and everyone understands that this use is
experimental, with informed consent from the patient.
Misoprostol induction shows potential for certain benefits, but
these benefits must be documented by careful research that at
the same time looks carefully for the risks.
We can't just throw drugs at people in an uncontrolled way.
If a practitioner hears about a new use and simply starts using
the drug this new way, this is experimenting on patients without
the usual safeguards in place for research subjects. And while
practitioners should report to the FDA on such off-label trials
and should always report to the FDA any side effects and risks
found, in reality only a very small number of practitioners ever
report anything to the FDA. As a result, a large information
vacuum exists in the United States with regard to what
prescription drugs are being used for which purposes and what
side effects and serious risks have occurred.
So when practitioners simply begin to use a drug for a new
purpose, there follows a phenomenon I have experienced for years
as a practicing clinician but rarely see described in print—the
informal spread of clinical experience. In hospital corridors,
lunchrooms and staff lounges, doctors, midwives and nurses share
their ideas and experience.
A recent technology makes it possible to listen in on such
clinical chat—online Web pages and chat rooms. By accessing the
World Wide Web and then using key words such as "misoprostol"
and "pregnancy," many Web pages and chat lines appear.
Clinicians, scientists, policy-makers and patients should read
these Internet pages from time to time. While clinicians writing
on the Web are not necessarily representative of all clinicians,
it is possible to discover how at least some of today's
clinicians think and act. It seems like eavesdropping because of
their candor and their blunt way of expressing ideas and
opinions and revealing their attitudes.
It is the informal communication of uncontrolled clinical
experience that has driven the spread of misoprostol induction,
as is apparent from the following actual statements taken from
the Internet in 1998 (2):
"Cytotec is extremely effective at very low
doses, is very cheap, and has been used on many, many women
without their being aware that it really is still an
experimental use."
"I must say that I have heard some great
things about Cytotec myself. I know some people who have used it
and say that they have pretty good luck with it. It sounds like
your ladies are pretty happy with its effects—two-hour labors
and such. Just be careful. I would have to say that the biggest
danger is leaving the woman alone. The stuff turns the cervix to
complete MUSHIE (Web message emphasis, not mine) and opens it
with a couple of contractions. So whatever you do, remember that
you must not stay gone too long."
"At my suggestion our high risk OB referral
hospital tried Cytotec—one-half tab per vagina—and after two
cases of hyperstimulation stopped its use."
"We've seen no cases of hyperstimulation
after Cytotec that did not respond to a two-gram bolus of MgSo4.
You can almost count on a delivery 12 hours after inserting the
Cytotec tablet."
"We are using it at Yale and although there
is a format for how to give it, there is still controversy on to
whom to give it. Pharmacy uses one of their nifty little pill
cutters and sends us one-fourth of a 100 microgram tablet
(remember this stuff was made for treatment of ulcers!)."
"I've personally used it twice and had
excellent results in women wanting homebirths, but going
postdates. I'm attaching my own protocol for anyone interested.
Again I warn that I am no expert and I consider this protocol to
be a "work in progress"—it will certainly change as I gather
experience and information about this drug."
"We are using misoprostol regularly for
induction—my department loves it. We use one of the protocols
published on OBGYN.Net Web
page."
"Our biggest fear is that the company will
pull Cytotec from the market, since our internist/GI buddies
tell us that it isn't worth a darn for its labeled indication."
What is apparent from this Internet medical practice is the
lack of appreciation of any borderline between experimenting on
patients and practicing medicine on patients and the absence of
concern for patients' rights to informed consent.
Also apparent from reading the Internet is the inability of
many clinicians to critically review published papers. The
general assumption is that since there are, as stated in one Web
message, "gobs of references" (2), the scientific work has been
done, and it is OK to use this drug for this purpose. The
tendency for clinicians to misinterpret scientific papers is in
part because of a difference in approach, since scientists must
believe they don't know, while clinicians, in order to do what
they do, must believe they do know. A common attitude among
clinicians, revealed by Internet messages, is that pregnancy and
birth are dangerous until proven safe, while technology and
drugs are safe until proven dangerous.
|
|
Issue 51
Theme: Fathers in Pregnancy and Birth
Articles on
ultrasound,
Cytotec, natural family planning, the "call" to
midwifery, placenta previa and much more round out the
issue. |
In the review of published randomized controlled trials (RCT)
of misoprostol induction, Enoch mentions several weaknesses of
these trials (1). A number of additional weaknesses of the
trials Enoch reviewed must be added to produce the following,
more complete, list:
- All trials compare misoprostol with another inducing
drug, but not with nonuse of a drug. Studies of the new use
of a drug need to begin with comparing its use with nonuse,
or no baseline data on effect exists.
- None of the RCTs is blind.
- No RCTs control for the risk status of the woman.
- No RCTs control for whether the woman is in active labor
and if so, what stage of labor.
- No RCTs have adequate standard dosage regimes. Defining
dose according to "adequate contraction pattern" is most
inadequate.
- Since both the dosages used and the drugs compared with
vary from study to study, the studies cannot be compared
with each other, nor can they be used for meta-analysis.
- All RCTs have been done at university hospitals. While
this may provide preliminary data on efficacy, it gives no
information on effectiveness—that is, how effective is this
use of this drug in the real world of community practice.
- The total sample size (both arms of the trial) in all
studies is far too small—between 126 and 220. This sample
size is completely inadequate for measuring risks. Since the
studies cannot be combined because they lack any
standardization of methodology, adding up the samples to
increase the sample size is not an option.
- In no trials is woman or baby followed for any
significant period of time to identify side effects or
risks.
- No trials report on certain, possibly rarer, risks, such
as cervical laceration and severe perineal tears.
- Of the six RCTs, five show significantly more fetal
tachycardia in the misoprostol arm, and the sixth RCT shows
more fetal tachycardia, which does not reach statistical
significance. This sixth study also reports more abnormal
fetal heart rate patterns and more meconium in the
misoprostol arm. These results are preliminary given the
small sample size, but they are most worrisome. When these
results on risks in the RCTs are combined with the case
reports Enoch reviews concerning uterine rupture after
misoprostol induction, these very preliminary findings
regarding risks of misoprostol induction cry out for further
research.
In summary, the studies to date might be a bit helpful in
fine tuning dose and dose interval and in suggesting possible
efficacy, but they leave wide open serious concerns about risks.
Turning again to the Internet and the gold standard of perinatal
science, the Cochrane Library, a review of misoprostol induction
in the second online issue in 1998 concludes:
"In dosages of 25 micrograms three hourly or
more, misoprostol is more effective than conventional methods of
cervical ripening and labour induction. The increase in uterine
hyperstimulation with fetal heart rate changes found in this
review is a matter of concern. Although no differences in
perinatal outcome were shown, the studies were not sufficiently
large to exclude the possibility of uncommon serious adverse
effects. The increase in meconium-stained liquor in one study
also requires further investigation.
"Thus, though misoprostol shows promise as a
highly effective, inexpensive and convenient agent for labour
induction, it cannot be recommended for routine use at this
stage. It is also not registered for such use in many countries.
"Because of the enormous economic and
possible clinical advantages of misoprostol, there is the need
for trials to establish its safety." (3)
In other words, the opinion of the best perinatal scientists
is that misoprostol induction is still experimental and should
be done only in a controlled research setting with the usual
protection of research subjects, including fully informed
consent. This is because to date our scientific data are
inadequate to tell us whether or not misoprostol induction is
safe.
The alacrity with which a technology or drug is adopted and
used is related to its advantages for the patient and, equally
or more importantly, for the practitioner. We have struggled for
years with little success to keep a lid on the medically
unnecessary use of that most convenient obstetrical
procedure—cesarean section. During this same time we have
struggled with little success to promote the adoption of the
evidence-based but inconvenient VBAC (vaginal birth after
cesarean).
How do we hold back the rapid spread of misoprostol
induction, which heralds the return of all the conveniences of
daylight obstetrics? That the drug is not approved by the FDA
for this purpose, not approved for this use by the drug
manufacturer, not endorsed for this use by the American College
of Obstetricians and Gynecologists or midwifery organizations,
and not recommended for routine use by scientists (who tell us
we do not know if it is safe) has had no apparent effect on the
enthusiasm with which clinicians, both doctors and midwives, are
starting to use it.
It is particularly disconcerting to learn from the Internet
and from chatting with practitioners that some midwives are
jumping on the misoprostol induction bandwagon. A homebirth
midwife on the Internet talks of her "work in progress"
protocol—an oxymoron, because protocols should never be based on
brief experience but always on a thorough review of all the best
current scientific data. Midwives need to make every effort to
achieve evidence-based practice, particularly when using drugs
and invasive technologies, and the clear lack of data on serious
risks of misoprostol induction should be sufficient to deter all
midwives from this procedure, whether in hospital or out of
hospital.
The issue here is consumer protection and quality assurance
in maternity care. We need a system of rational pharmaceutical
management that guarantees adequate evaluation of every use of a
drug prior to its use for that purpose as well as drug protocols
developed by an officially recognized group of scientists,
clinicians (including midwives), policy-makers, and consumers
and based on the best scientific evidence. Present consumer
protection systems in some countries, for example in
Scandinavia, include mandatory prior evaluation and officially
endorsed consensus protocols, and there is no evidence that
progress in maternity care is held back.
However, in some countries such as the United States and the
United Kingdom, the only way consumers of health care have found
to protect themselves is through the courts, because this is the
only place doctors and hospitals cannot successfully stonewall
information and opinion. Too many times clinicians are sued for
the wrong reasons because there is not a system to guarantee
prior adequate evaluation and evidence-based protocols with some
weight to them.
The case reports on uterine rupture after misoprostol
induction recommend not using this drug if the woman has a
scarred uterus, and Enoch, in her review, wisely echoes this
recommendation (1). But after more than a decade of cesarean
section rates in the United States above 20 percent, a
significant proportion of American women of childbearing age
have a scarred uterus, and such a policy would sharply reduce
the opportunities for daylight obstetrics. How many uteri will
be ruptured before a court case finally applies a needed brake
in this practice? I would welcome learning of cases where
misoprostol induction was used without fully informed consent
and there was subsequent uterine rupture, cervical laceration or
other serious complications.
Marsden
Wagner, MD, MS, is a perinatologist, neonatalogist
and perinatal epidemiologist from California who is an outspoken
supporter of midwifery. He was responsible for maternal and
child health in the European Regional Office of WHO for 14
years. Marsden travels all over the world to talk about
appropriate uses of technology in birth and utilizing midwives
for the best outcome. His book Pursuing the Birth Machine
is a must for anyone involved in birth.
Click
here for a complete biography.
References
- Enoch, Jennifer. (1999). Misoprostol (Cytotec): a new
method of inducing labor.
Midwifery Today, No. 49.
- Copies of 17 pages of messages on misoprostol induction
printed off the World Wide Web on May 26, 1998, available
from this author.
- Hofmeyr, G. J. (1998). Misoprostol administered
vaginally for cervical ripening and labour induction with a
viable fetus. The Cochrane Library, Issue 2.
Related Information:
|