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Carbetocin Uterotonic Treatment in Twin Pregnancies for Prevention of Postpartum Hemorrhage

Carbetocin Uterotonic Treatment in Twin Pregnancies for Prevention of Postpartum Hemorrhage

Recruiting
18 years and older
Female
Phase 4

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Overview

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the drug carbetocin works better than standard care to prevent heavy bleeding after childbirth in people carrying twin pregnancies. Heavy bleeding after delivery, also called postpartum hemorrhage, is more common after twin births and can lead to anemia, blood transfusions, and other serious health problems.

In this study, bleeding will be evaluated by measuring how much blood hemoglobin levels drop from before delivery to the day after delivery.

The main questions this study aims to answer are:

  • Does giving carbetocin after delivery lower blood loss compared with standard oxytocin treatment?
  • Is carbetocin safe and practical to use in twin deliveries?

Researchers will compare carbetocin to standard oxytocin treatment to see which approach better prevents bleeding after twin vaginal or cesarean delivery.

Participants will:

  • Be randomly assigned to receive either carbetocin or standard oxytocin after the second twin is delivered
  • Have blood tests before delivery and on the day after delivery
  • Be followed during their hospital stay and for up to six weeks after delivery for safety outcomes

Description

Postpartum hemorrhage is a major cause of maternal morbidity worldwide and occurs more frequently in twin pregnancies compared with singleton deliveries. Uterine overdistension in multiple gestations increases the risk of uterine atony, the leading cause of postpartum hemorrhage. Preventive uterotonic therapy is therefore a central component of routine care following twin delivery.

Carbetocin is a long-acting synthetic analogue of oxytocin that induces sustained uterine contraction and is approved for the prevention of postpartum hemorrhage. Previous randomized trials and meta-analyses have demonstrated that carbetocin is associated with reduced need for additional uterotonic agents and blood transfusion compared with oxytocin, primarily in cesarean deliveries. However, data specific to twin pregnancies are limited, and no randomized controlled trial has directly compared carbetocin with standard oxytocin prophylaxis in a twin population including both vaginal and cesarean deliveries.

This single-center randomized controlled trial is designed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of prophylactic carbetocin compared with standard oxytocin for the prevention of postpartum hemorrhage in twin deliveries. Pregnant individuals aged 18 years or older with twin pregnancies delivering at or beyond 23 weeks of gestation will be eligible to participate. Following written informed consent, participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either carbetocin or standard oxytocin immediately after delivery of the second twin.

Randomization will be performed using computer-generated permuted block sequences to ensure balanced group allocation. The assigned uterotonic treatment will be administered according to group assignment as part of routine postpartum care. Participants in the intervention group will receive a single intravenous dose of carbetocin, while participants in the control group will receive intravenous oxytocin according to institutional protocol.

Maternal hemoglobin levels will be obtained as part of routine clinical care prior to delivery and again on the first postpartum day. The primary outcome of the study is the change in maternal hemoglobin from before delivery to postpartum day one, serving as an objective measure of postpartum blood loss. Secondary outcomes include estimated blood loss, clinical postpartum hemorrhage, need for additional uterotonic agents, blood product transfusion, use of additional medical or surgical interventions for bleeding, maternal infections, intensive care unit admission, and length of postpartum hospitalization.

Participants will be followed throughout their delivery hospitalization and for up to six weeks postpartum to assess maternal outcomes and safety. Adverse events will be monitored by the clinical care team and reviewed in accordance with institutional policies. All data will be collected from the electronic medical record and stored in a secure, password-protected research database using unique study identifiers to maintain confidentiality.

The planned sample size is 120 participants, which is expected to provide sufficient power to detect a clinically meaningful difference in postpartum hemoglobin change between groups while ensuring adequate representation of both vaginal and cesarean deliveries. This trial aims to provide high-quality evidence regarding the role of carbetocin in preventing postpartum hemorrhage in twin pregnancies and to inform future clinical practice in this high-risk population.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Pregnant individuals aged ≥18 years
  • Twin pregnancies
  • Gestational age ≥23 weeks

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Known hypersensitivity or contraindication to carbetocin
  • Higher-order multiple gestation (triplets or more)
  • Maternal age \<18 years
  • Known placenta accreta spectrum
  • Known bleeding disorder
  • Intrauterine fetal death of one or more fetuses
  • Hyponatremia precluding oxytocin use
  • Planned delivery at a non-participating hospital

Study details
    Postpartum Hemorrhage
    Twin Pregnancy

NCT07401524

Sheba Medical Center

13 May 2026

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