South Wales Evening Post

Report finds women face a of pregnancy complicati­ons

- LYDIA STEPHENS REPORTER lydia.stephens@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE first in-depth report into how Covid affects pregnant women has shown a higher risk of severe maternal and newborn complicati­ons than previously thought.

Researcher­s from the University of Oxford found that women with Covid were over 50% more likely to experience pregnancy complicati­ons - such as premature birth, preeclamps­ia, admission to intensive care and death compared to pregnant women unaffected by the virus.

The study, which followed more than 2,100 women from March to October last year, also found that newborns of infected women were also nearly three times more at risk of severe complicati­ons requiring neonatal intensive care.

However, the study did find that the risks in pregnant women with Covid who showed no symptoms were similar to women who did not contract the virus during their pregnancy.

Aris Papageorgh­iou, Professor of Fetal Medicine at the University of Oxford who co-led the study called Intercovid, said: “Women with Covid19 during pregnancy were over 50% more likely to experience pregnancy complicati­ons (such as premature birth, preeclamps­ia, admission to intensive care and death) compared to pregnant women unaffected by Covid-19.

“Newborns of infected women were also nearly three times more at risk of severe medical complicati­ons, such as admission to a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit – mostly due to premature birth.

“The good news, however, is that the risks in symptomles­s infected women and non-infected

women were similar.”

The study looked at over 2,100 pregnant women with and without a Covid diagnosis during their pregnancy from over 43 maternity hospitals in 18 low, middle and high-income countries across the world.

Professor Papageorgh­iou added: “Fortunatel­y, there were very few maternal deaths; neverthele­ss, the risk of dying during pregnancy and in the postnatal period was 22 times higher in women with Covid-19 than in the non-infected pregnant women.”

The study also highlighte­d that close to 10% of newborns from mothers that were test-positive for the virus also tested positive for the virus during the first few postnatal days.

The study found that in pregnant women who displayed symptoms of Covid:

46% are more likely to suffer hypertensi­on

76% are more likely to develop pre-eclampsia

70% are more likely to endure foetal distress

59% are more likely to deliver pre-term

and 58% of babies more likely to have low birth weight

It also found that three times as many infected mothers developed infections requiring antibiotic­s and five times as many ended up in intensive care. Of the 12 mothers who died out of the 2,100, 11 were infected with Covid.

Despite the evidence, it is still advised that women are given the Covid vaccine in line with their age group.

After real world data in the US found that over 90,000 pregnant women had been given the Modern or Pfizer vaccine without any safety concerns, the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI) gave the green light for pregnant women in the UK to start being offered the vaccine.

They will only be offered these two vaccines due to the amount of data available, although women who have already had the Oxford Astrazenec­a vaccine and have since become pregnant are still being encouraged to receive their second dose of the vaccine.

Dr Amy Robb, consultant obstetrici­an and lead for antenatal care at the University Hospital of Wales, said it is for women to consider the risks of getting Covid while pregnant and the risks of the vaccine.

Dr Robb said: “We have been vaccinatin­g women in high-risk groups since January. So that is a pregnant woman who is maybe older, or carries more weight, or has diabetes or blood pressure problems, and those women are more at risk of getting severe Covid.

“And also, they are the types of women who will be coming into hospital more for their care. So they’ll be coming in, maybe sitting in a waiting room, they have contact with health profession­als.

“So it is a double edged sword, you want to protect them so they don’t come into your hospital and get Covid and you also want them not to get Covid so they can come to their hospital appointmen­ts.”

 ?? Picture: Stringer/getty Images ??
Picture: Stringer/getty Images

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