Abstract
For decades, cervical insufficiency (CI) has been framed predominantly as a mechanical failure of the cervix resulting in painless mid-trimester dilatation. This disease-centered paradigm, reinforced by clinical teaching and administrative coding, does not fully capture the dynamic and biologically integrated nature of cervical remodeling. Accumulating evidence suggests that cervical change is governed by coordinated mechanical, inflammatory, and immunologic interactions rather than by a purely anatomic defect. To outline a process-oriented conceptual framework that situates CI within the broader preterm-birth continuum, this perspective aims to integrate biomechanical, inflammatory, and immunologic dimensions of cervical remodeling and to emphasize that infection- and inflammation-related changes represent dynamic, potentially modifiable elements that may inform more individualized, biology-guided clinical decision-making. This Perspective traces the evolution from a traditional "disease entity" interpretation of CI toward a more integrated view of cervical remodeling as a dynamic, biology-responsive process. Emerging data suggest that when intra-amniotic infection or inflammation is appropriately managed, cervical competence may be partially restored, and mechanical support can be applied more safely in selected patients. Clinical observations indicate that infection-controlled cerclage is associated with meaningful prolongation of gestation. Earlier reports describing double-level mechanical reinforcement techniques conceptually align with contemporary interpretations of infection-controlled emergent cerclage by linking surgical timing with the underlying biology of cervical change. Rather than proposing a prescriptive management pathway, this framework highlights how mechanical, inflammatory, and immunologic factors may interact across heterogeneous CI etiologies and how individualized intervention may be guided by biologic context. Understanding CI as a dynamic rather than a fixed condition provides a framework that integrates its mechanical, inflammatory, and immunologic dimensions within the preterm birth continuum. Such a perspective encourages individualized, biology-informed interpretation of cervical change and supports more context-specific use of established interventions such as cerclage. By emphasizing developmental processes rather than a static defect, this approach seeks to bridge classical clinical practice with contemporary insights into cervical remodeling.