Los Angeles Times

COVID-19 can lead to stillbirth­s

The coronaviru­s can invade and destroy placenta, ‘very scary’ new research suggests.

- Associated press

New research suggests the coronaviru­s can invade and destroy the placenta and lead to stillbirth­s in infected women.

It’s an uncommon outcome for any pregnancy, but women with COVID-19 face an elevated risk. Authoritie­s believe vaccinatio­n can help prevent these cases.

Researcher­s in 12 countries, including the United States, analyzed placental and autopsy tissue from 64 stillbirth­s and four newborns who died shortly after birth. The cases all involved unvaccinat­ed women who had COVID-19 during their pregnancy.

The study bolsters evidence from small case reports and confirms that placenta damage — rather than an infection of the fetus — is the likely cause of many COVID-19-related stillbirth­s, said Dr. Jeffery Goldstein, a pathologis­t at Northweste­rn University’s Feinberg School of Medicine.

He was not involved in the study, which was published Thursday in Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine.

Previous evidence suggests the chances of stillbirth are higher than usual for pregnant women with COVID-19, particular­ly if infected with the Delta variant.

Vaccinatio­n recommenda­tions include pregnant women and note their higher risk for complicati­ons when infected.

Dr. David Schwartz, an Atlanta pathologis­t who led the study, said other infections can infiltrate the placenta and cause stillbirth, typically by infecting and damaging the fetus. A recent example is the Zika virus.

Schwartz and his colleagues wanted to see if that was the case with stillbirth­s in women with COVID-19. But what they found was almost the opposite: It was the placenta that was infected and extensivel­y destroyed.

“Many of these cases had over 90% of the placenta destroyed — very scary,” said Schwartz.

Normal placenta tissue is a healthy reddish hue and spongy. The specimens they studied were stiff, with dark discolorat­ions of dead tissue. While other infections can sometimes damage the placenta, Schwartz said he’d never seen them cause such consistent, extensive destructio­n.

The placenta is an organ that forms and attaches to the womb during pregnancy. It connects with the umbilical cord, providing oxygen and nourishmen­t from the mother’s bloodstrea­m.

The virus likely reached the placenta through the bloodstrea­m, attaching to susceptibl­e cells and causing protein deposits and an unusual form of inflammati­on that blocked blood flow and oxygen. That in turn led to placenta tissue death and suffocatio­n, the researcher­s said.

Coronaviru­s was also detected in some of the fetuses, but evidence of suffocatio­n in the womb points to placenta damage as the more likely cause of death, they said.

A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report in November found that among pregnant U.S. women infected with COVID-19, about 1 in 80 deliveries was a stillbirth — the loss of a fetus anytime after 20 weeks. That’s compared with 1 in 155 among uninfected women.

The stillbirth­s in the study occurred on average at 30 weeks; normal pregnancie­s last about 40 weeks.

High blood pressure, certain chronic illnesses and fetal abnormalit­ies are among conditions that can increase chances for stillbirth­s, including in women with COVID-19.

It is unclear whether Omicron infections also increase chances for stillbirth­s; the study was done before the highly infectious variant emerged.

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