https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sh-4-54.html both procedures having been shown to be equally effective. Complication rates (e.g., vaginal bleeding, severe pain, uterine hyperstimulation syndrome) during the cervical ripening phase are low (0.3 - 1.5%); severe adverse outcomes (e.g., placental abruption) have not been reported. Compared to inpatient induction of labor using vaginal PGE 2 , outpatient cervical ripening using a balloon catheter had a lower rate of deliveries/24 hours and a significantly higher need for oxytocin; however, hospital stay was significantly shorter, frequency of pain during the cervical ripening phase was significantly lower, and patients' duration of sleep was longer. A randomized controlled study comparing outpatient cervical priming with a balloon catheter with outpatient or inpatient induction of labor with oral misoprostol would be of clinical interest.Background Prior spontaneous preterm birth is a strong risk factor for the recurrence of spontaneous preterm birth in a subsequent pregnancy and has been evaluated in prevention studies using progesterone (natural progesterone administered orally or vaginally, and 17-hydroxyprogesterone caproate [17-OHPC]) as a selection criterion. Based on the findings of a randomized, placebo-controlled study, 17-OHPC was approved for use in 2011 by the Food and Drug Administration in the USA for the prevention of recurrent preterm birth. The approval was granted with qualification that a subsequent confirmatory study would need to be carried out, the results of which have just been published (PROLONG trial). Method A systematic literature search for the period from 1970 to April 2020 using the search terms "preterm birth" and "17-OHPC" or "progesterone" was carried out. Only randomized, placebo-controlled studies of women with singleton pregnancies who received 17-OHPC to prevent recurrent preterm birth were included in th factors are required to identify the group of pregnant women which could b