Interactive Transcript
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So we talked a little bit earlier about follow-up.
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So we, we need to figure out, well, how do we get from this
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again, red light to this green light?
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And again, we do a follow-up.
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To be totally honest, I found the follow-up recommendations
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from the consensus conference.
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Uh, a little confusing in the way they worded it.
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They left some stuff out,
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but I'm gonna go over them here
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so you're aware of what they are.
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Um, but the, the British group also did a follow-up study
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that I think, um, iron some
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of those things out a little more
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and makes it even easier for us to have our recommendations.
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So from the consensus conference,
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if we saw us empty sac less than 25 millimeters, pregnancy
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of uncertain viability, if you did a follow-up in 14 days,
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two weeks, now you could call it a definitive demise if no
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embryo with a heartbeat was identified,
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and in which case we are green-lighted for safe to evacuate.
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And again, I just keep saying this,
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but I'm gonna to emphasize it doesn't mean you need
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to evacuate the uterus.
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That's a decision for the gynecologist obstetrician,
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but it's safe to do so.
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If they were to so desire, what if we saw a sack
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with a yolk sack?
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Well, in that case, they wanted you to follow up in 11 days
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and you could diagnose a demise if there's
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no embryo with a heartbeat.
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Strangely, they actually didn't say what
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to do if you saw an embryo that was, say three millimeters
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or an embryo less than seven millimeters without
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a heartbeat, what to do?
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So the British group, as I said, they came out
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with a follow-up study
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and they found using these follow-up guidelines
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that I'm gonna cover here had a 100% positive predictive
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value and specificity for pregnancy failure.
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Now remember, these are the people that really wanted us
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to operate on the very safe end of practice in order
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to not have any chance
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of harming a possible viable intru in pregnancy.
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This is what we use.
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If you see an embryo less than seven millimeters.
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So this is a pregnancy of unknown viability
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with no heartbeat.
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You do a seven day follow-up and we will call it a demise.
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If at that point we don't see an embryo with a heartbeat.
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And why is this safe?
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I, I told you I wouldn't talk about how fast embryos
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or sacks grew, but I lied a little bit
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and I don't expect you to remember it
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because I barely remember it.
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But I cover this just
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to understand why this practice is so safe.
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So if we identify an embryo, let's say one
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of the smallest embryos, we could see two millimeters.
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An embryo will grow at about a millimeter a day.
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So in seven days, in theory that two millimeter
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Embryo should be nine millimeters.
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Well, that's way beyond the five millimeters we used to use.
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And it's clearly beyond the seven millimeters
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that we're supposed to use now.
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And this is all not to mention, as I said
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before, that really we see a heartbeat in almost
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any embryo that's alive.
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So point being a one week follow-up
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for any embryo without a heartbeat
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that's less than seven millimeters in one week, is going
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to be a very safe practice
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and a safe way to diagnose a definitive demise.
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Now in the consensus statement, they distinguish
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between a sack and a yolk sack or one without a yolk sack.
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And they had differing time follow-ups.
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But I actually liked what the British group came up with
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and made this even simpler.
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And they said, forget about the yolk sack or whatever.
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I just wanna look at a sack that's less than 12 millimeters
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or greater than 12 millimeters,
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and we're going to not add in numbers like 11.
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We're gonna keep it at numbers like seven in 14
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days, one week, two week.
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So if you saw a mean sac diameter
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of less than 12 millimeters,
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you could follow it up in 14 days.
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And if you don't see an embryo with a heartbeat at
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that time, it's a demise and it's safe to evacuate.
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Now, um, sac with no embryo
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that's greater than 12 millimeters greater than
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or equal to 12 millimeters, obviously
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that's gone even further.
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So we only have to follow that up for seven days
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and it's a demise if we don't see
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an embryo with a heartbeat.
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And then we're back to safe to evacuate.
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So why is this one safe Again,
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I told you I didn't talk about this,
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but just so we understand, in a normal pregnancy,
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the gestational sac shows up at five weeks
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and an embryo usually at six weeks.
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And you don't need to remember those numbers.
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But what I wanna illustrate is that the time
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between a gestational sack showing up
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and an embryo showing up is only about a week.
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So in the cases where we've already got a sack
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that's bigger than 12 millimeters,
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it's been there for a while.
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So waiting one week should be very safe
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if the sack is smaller, okay,
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maybe it hasn't been there for a while.
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So waiting two weeks again should be pretty safe.
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And these were shown in their study to be 100% specific.
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So we do need to make sure that we are using, uh, again,
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the criteria for intrauterine pregnancy
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that we talked about earlier,
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but these guidelines of one week,
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two week follow-up just based on sac size or what I use
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and what I think are a lot easier to remember and to use.