Objective: To determine how United States Maternal-Fetal medicine specialists recommend delivery of a breech fetus at the threshold of viability.
Methods: U.S. Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM) members were surveyed about; geographic location, practice type, whether they performed deliveries, definition of threshold for viability, recommendations for delivery of a breech fetus at the threshold of viability, and if the current medical-legal climate had any bearing on their decisions. Chi-Square and Fisher's Exact tests were used for analysis.
Results: 510 SMFM members responded to the questionnaire. The highest percentage of respondents stated '23 weeks' (31%) as the cutoff for viability, followed by '24 weeks' (21%) and '23 weeks or 500 g' (10%). Seventy percent recommended cesarean delivery for a breech fetus at the threshold of viability. The majority of respondents based their decision on 'published data' or 'expert opinion', however, 58.6% reported they felt current medical evidence was inadequate to support a recommendation. Fifty-three percent stated their recommendations are affected by medical-legal concerns.
Conclusion: The majority of U.S. maternal fetal-medicine specialists who responded would recommend cesarean delivery for a breech fetus at the threshold of viability, despite the belief that there is inadequate evidence in the literature to support this recommendation.