BJOG. 2001
Feb;108(2):133-42.
Effectiveness and safety of the oxytocin antagonist atosiban versus
beta-adrenergic agonists in the treatment of preterm labour. The
Worldwide Atosiban versus Beta-agonists Study Group.
Worldwide Atosiban versus Beta-agonists Study Group.
Objectives:
To compare the effectiveness and safety of the oxytocin
antagonist atosiban with conventional beta-adrenergic agonist
(beta-agonist) therapy in the treatment of preterm labour.
Design:
Three
multinational, multicentre, double-blind, randomised, controlled trials.
Setting Hospitals in Australia, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, France,
Israel, Sweden, and the UK. POPULATION: Women diagnosed with preterm
labour at 23-33 completed weeks of gestation.
Methods:
Seven hundred and
forty-two women were randomised; 733 received atosiban (n = 363;
intravenous (iv) bolus dose of 6.75 mg, then 300 microg/minute iv. for
3h and 100 microg/min iv thereafter) or beta-agonist (n = 379; ritodrine,
salbutamol or terbutaline iv; dose titrated) for at least 18h and up to
48 hours. Uterine contraction rate, cervical dilatation and effacement
were used to assess progression of labour. An all patients treated
analysis, using the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test, was performed. MAIN
OUTCOME MEASURES: Tocolytic effectiveness was assessed in terms of the
number of women undelivered after 48 hours and seven days. Safety was
assessed in terms of maternal side effects and neonatal morbidity.
Results:
There were no significant differences between atosiban and
beta-agonists in delaying delivery for 48h (88.1% vs 88.9%; P = 0.99) or
seven days (79.7% versus 77.6%; P = 0.28). Tocolytic effectiveness was
also similar in terms of mean [SD] gestational age at delivery (35.8
[3.9] weeks vs 35.5 [4.1] weeks) and mean [SD] birthweight (2,491 [813]
g versus 2,461 [831] g). Maternal side effects, particularly
cardiovascular adverse events (8.3% vs 81.2%, P < 0.001), were reported
more frequently in women given beta-agonists, resulting in more
treatment discontinuations due to side effects (1.1% vs 15.4%, P =
0.0001). No statistical differences in neonatal/infant outcomes were
observed with either study medication.
Conclusions:
In the largest study
of tocolytic therapy to date, atosiban was comparable in clinical
effectiveness to conventional beta-agonist therapy, but was associated
with fewer maternal cardiovascular side effects. We conclude that
atosiban has clinical advantages over current tocolytic therapy.