Albuquerque Journal

Pregnancy increases risk of COVID-19 complicati­ons

Study finds death rate 22 times higher for expectant women with coronaviru­s

- BY AMINA KHAN

A study of more than 2,000 pregnant women from dozens of hospitals around the world has found that those with COVID-19 saw a significan­tly higher risk of death and of complicati­ons for themselves or their newborns.

The study, published Thursday in JAMA Pediatrics, underscore­s that pregnancy is a major risk factor for complicati­ons involving COVID-19 — one that should be considered alongside the likes of obesity and asthma — and could help persuade more women to line up for vaccinatio­ns.

The report adds to a growing body of evidence “that will hopefully tip the scales towards more people getting vaccinated,” said

Dr. Ilina Pluym, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at UCLA who was not involved in the research.

The COVID-19 pandemic has put an additional burden on pregnant women: In addition to worrying about how they’d be affected by a coronaviru­s infection, they’re also anxious about the health of their babies.

This was particular­ly true at the beginning of the pandemic, when the uncertain extent of the risks “was affecting pregnant individual­s’ mental health,” the study authors wrote, in large part because there wasn’t much research available comparing the outcomes for pregnant women with and without COVID-19.

Dr. Aris Papageorgh­iou, a fetal medicine specialist at Oxford University, and his colleagues were able to start tracking pregnant COVID-19 patients early in the pandemic by working with hospitals involved in a large study tracking the health and developmen­t of normal pregnancie­s.

For eight months starting March 2, they enrolled women age 18 or older at any stage of pregnancy or delivery who had been diagnosed with COVID-19. Every time they enrolled a new COVID-19 patient, they immediatel­y enrolled two pregnant women without symptoms and who required the same level of care. If that wasn’t possible, they enrolled pregnant women who were not diagnosed with COVID-19 and delivered immediatel­y after the COVID-19 patient did.

They ultimately enrolled 706 pregnant COVID-19 patients and 1,424 pregnant women without the disease. The women were treated in 43 hospitals across 18 countries — Argentina, Brazil, Egypt, France, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Pakistan, Russia, Spain, Switzerlan­d, the United Kingdom and the United States. Most of the women were diagnosed during their third trimester of pregnancy.

Compared with pregnant women who did not have COVID-19, those who did were 76% more likely to develop preeclamps­ia or eclampsia, the researcher­s found. They were also more than three times as likely to develop a severe infection that required treatment with antibiotic­s and five times as likely to be admitted to a hospital’s intensive care unit.

Strikingly, the risk of death was more than 22 times higher for the women with COVID-19.

The babies were at a disadvanta­ge as well. The risk of preterm birth was 59% higher for mothers with COVID-19, and the risk of a medically indicated preterm birth was nearly double. Compared with babies that weren’t born to COVID-19 patients, those who were faced a 2.66 times higher risk of severe illness after they were born and a 2.14 times higher risk of severe illness and death in the time just before and after birth.

For pregnant women, “it really seems that COVID increases the likelihood of having an adverse outcome,” said Papageorgh­iou, the study’s senior author.

Fever and shortness of breath — common symptoms of COVID-19 — for any length of time were linked to a 2.56 times higher risk of severe complicati­ons for mother and 4.97 times higher risk of complicati­ons for baby.

For pregnant women with coronaviru­s infections that did not cause COVID-19 symptoms, the picture was not nearly as grim: They had a 24% higher risk of illness and a 63% higher risk of preeclamps­ia.

Among the women with coronaviru­s infections, 13% of their newborns also tested positive for the virus. Women who had a cesarean delivery were more than twice as likely to have a newborn test positive. Breastfeed­ing, however, had no associated risk.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States