Background: It is well established that antibiotics administered in preterm prelabor rupture of membranes increases latency to delivery. While data is limited for membrane rupture prior to viability, antibiotics may also increase latency in this population.

Objective: To assesses the effect of prophylactic antibiotics on the duration of latency in individuals with previable prelabor rupture of membranes.

Study Design: Retrospective cohort of pregnancies with previable prelabor rupture of membranes prior to 23 weeks, 0 days in a single health system(2013-2022). Patients opting for termination or with a contraindication to expectant management were excluded. The primary outcome was latency from previable prelabor rupture of membranes diagnosis to delivery. Secondary outcomes included subanalysis by gestational age as well as maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Bivariate statistics compared patients who did and did not received antibiotics. Kaplan-Meier/Cox proportional hazards ratios using significant covariates(p<0.1) in bivariate analysis models examined antibiotic impact on latency.

Results: Of 115 patients, 46(40%) met inclusion criteria, of whom 34(74%) received latency antibiotics. Median latency did not differ with antibiotic receipt(1 week, [0.4,2.6] versus 0.6 weeks [0.3,0.9], p=0.27). When adjusted for gestational age at rupture of membranes, antibiotics were not associated with longer latency(hazard ratio1.33 [0.91,1.93]). Antibiotic receipt was associated with lower rates of previable delivery(23.0 weeks, [22.7, 24.0] versus 21.3 weeks [20.5,23.1], p=0.006). Adjusted odds of previable delivery remained lower with receipt of antibiotics(adjusted odds ratio 0.20, [0.04,0.90]). Antibiotics were associated with longer latency in patients with rupture of membranes at less than 22 week's gestation(2.4wks [1.3,4.4] vs 0.6wks [0.1,0.9], p=0.02).

Conclusion: Antibiotic administration at the time of previable prelabor rupture of membranes was associated with longer latency if prior to 22 weeks' gestation. Antibiotic administration increased the odds of delivering after viability. Further study should address optimal antibiotics strategies for this unique population.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2516-1911DOI Listing

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