JAMA. 1993 Jul
7;270(1):77-82.
Cesarean delivery for women presenting with genital herpes lesions. Efficacy,
risks, and costs.
Randolph AG, Washington AE, Prober CG.
Department of Pediatrics, University of California School of Medicine, San
Francisco.
OBJECTIVE--To assess the effect of cesarean delivery on neonatal and maternal
morbidity and mortality and their associated costs for two populations of women
presenting with genital herpes lesions at delivery: those with and those without
a history of genital herpes. DATA SOURCES--MEDLINE (search for herpes simplex
virus and neonatal, cesarean, and mortality) and recognized experts. DATA
EXTRACTION--The quality of the overall data used for baseline values was graded
using a predetermined scale. RESULTS--The practice of cesarean delivery for
women with a history of genital herpes lesions that recur at delivery results in
more than 1580 excess cesarean deliveries performed for every poor neonatal
outcome prevented, a cost per neonatal herpes case averted of $2.5 million and a
cost per quality-adjusted life-year gained of $203,000. For these women,
lowering the efficacy of cesarean delivery or the herpes simplex virus vertical
transmission rate could result in maternal deaths outnumbering neonatal deaths
prevented. In contrast, cesarean delivery for women with no history of genital
herpes simplex virus who have lesions at delivery has low maternal costs per
neonatal benefit and saves money. CONCLUSIONS--Women who present with their
first clinical episode of genital herpes at delivery should have a cesarean
section performed. However, the current practice of cesarean delivery for women
with a history of genital herpes lesions that recur at delivery results in high
maternal morbidity and mortality at substantial financial expense, underscoring
the urgency of examining alternative management strategies.