Placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) is an obstetrical complication in which the placenta abnormally invades the uterine wall, increasing the risk of hemorrhage, surgical morbidity, and maternal mortality. Management is often complex and multidisciplinary, particularly when invasion extends beyond the uterus. For this reason, standardized guidelines are essential to support early diagnosis and coordinated care across specialties. Significant variations in clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) remain, especially between countries with differing levels of income. This systematic review evaluates national and international CPGs published within the last decade to identify areas of agreement, disagreement, and insufficient evidence across all stages of PAS care. To identify CPGs related to PAS, a comprehensive search of professional society websites, PubMed, the GIN Library, and the ECRI Guidelines Trust was conducted. Two independent reviewers evaluated the sources to extract relevant clinical recommendations, which were then sent to a panel of 15 to 18 experts who had authored their own PAS guidelines. During 2 rounds of structured feedback, the panel could comment on, clarify, or revise their own guidelines before the committee would evaluate them for consensus and sufficiency of evidence. Each guideline was categorized as demonstrating high agreement, poor consensus, or high levels of insufficient evidence. The data were visualized by quantifying the level of agreement and sorting each guideline into categories of epidemiology, diagnosis, antenatal management, surgical management, and postnatal care. A total of 18 articles from 14 national or international societies were included. There was high agreement on epidemiologic risk factors, diagnostic principles, and key elements of antenatal management. A history of cesarean delivery consistently emerged as a major risk factor, especially in patients with concurrent placenta previa. All guidelines supported ultrasound as the primary diagnostic tool, with most recommending standardized descriptors to enhance accuracy. Targeted second-trimester imaging was widely endorsed, with some guidelines supporting first-trimester screening for high-risk patients. There was also strong consensus surrounding antenatal management and the need for specialized care, emphasizing referral to tertiary centers with multidisciplinary expertise, adequate surgical and transfusion resources, and planned delivery around 34 to 35 weeks. In contrast, surgical and peripartum recommendations showed substantial variability and limited evidence, including uncertainty regarding optimal incision type, use of balloon occlusion catheters, anesthesia approaches, and conservative management strategies. Only 1 guideline offered specific recommendations for low- and middle-income countries. These findings indicate that while some aspects of PAS management, such as diagnosis and antenatal care, have a broad consensus, other areas remain under-investigated and lacking consensus. This is especially true for surgical and conservative management in the peripartum period and indicates a need for comparative research and international collaboration to develop standardization. In addition, PAS management in low- and middle-income countries, which often face resource limitations that require flexible and unique practices, is significantly limited. While further research and discussion are needed, this study provides a roadmap for global improvement in PAS management.
10.1097/01.ogx.0001179560.22096.dc
Journal article
2026-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
81
10 - 12
2
Humans, Placenta Accreta, Pregnancy, Female, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Cesarean Section