110 results on '"Varner, Michael"'
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2. Elevations of amniotic fluid macrophage inflammatory protein-1α concentrations in women during term and preterm labor
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Dudley, Donald J., Hunter, Cheri, Mitchell, Murray D., and Varner, Michael W.
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- 1996
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3. The risk of preterm birth across generations
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Porter, T. Flint, Fraser, Alison M., Hunter, Cheri Y., Ward, Ryk H., and Varner, Michael W.
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To examine the risk of preterm birth for mothers who themselves were born before term.
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- 1997
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4. A population-based study of congenital diaphragmatic hernia in utah: 1988–1994
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Cannon, Cynthia, Dildy, Gary A., Ward, Robert, Varner, Michael W., and Dudley, Donald J.
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- 1996
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5. The intergenerational predisposition to operative delivery
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Varner, Michael W., Fraser, Alison M., Hunter, Cheri Y., Corneli, Patrice S., and Ward, Ryk H.
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- 1996
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6. Agreement Between Pregnant Individuals' Self-Report of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Vaccination and Medical Record Documentation.
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Wielgosz K, Dawood FS, Stockwell MS, Varner M, Newes-Adeyi G, Ellington S, Vargas C, Bruno AM, Powers E, Morrill T, Reichle L, Battarbee AN, and Tita AT
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- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Self Report, COVID-19 Vaccines, Vaccination, Medical Records, Documentation, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
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For public health research such as vaccine uptake or effectiveness assessments, self-reported coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination status may be a more efficient measure than verifying vaccination status from medical records if agreement between sources is high. We assessed agreement between self-reported and medical record-documented COVID-19 vaccination status among pregnant individuals followed in a cohort during August 2020-October 2021. At end of pregnancy, participants completed questionnaires about COVID-19 vaccine receipt during pregnancy; staff verified vaccination status using medical records. Agreement was assessed between self-reported and medical record vaccination status using Cohen's kappa. There was high agreement between self-reported and medical record vaccination status (Kappa coefficient=0.94, 95% CI 0.91-0.98), suggesting that self-report may be acceptable for ascertaining COVID-19 vaccination status during pregnancy., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure Alan Tita reports that his institution receives funding from Pfizer for vaccine studies among pregnant individuals. Gabriella Newes-Adeyi, Tyler Morrill, and Lawrence Reichle are employees of Abt Associates, which received funding from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to coordinate study implementation and data collection. The other authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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7. Umbilical Cord Collection and Drug Testing to Estimate Prenatal Substance Exposure in Utah.
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Smid MC, Allshouse AA, McMillin GA, Nunez K, Cavin T, Worden J, Buchi K, Muniyappa B, Varner MW, Cochran G, and Metz TD
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- Amphetamines analysis, Amphetamines metabolism, Analgesics, Opioid, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Umbilical Cord chemistry, Utah epidemiology, Dronabinol analysis, Substance Abuse Detection
- Abstract
Objective: Our primary objective was to estimate statewide prenatal substance exposure based on umbilical cord sampling. Our secondary objectives were to compare prevalence of prenatal substance exposure across urban, rural, and frontier regions, and to compare contemporary findings to those previously reported., Methods: We performed a cross-sectional prevalence study of prenatal substance exposure, as determined by umbilical cord positivity for 49 drugs and drug metabolites, through the use of qualitative liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. All labor and delivery units in Utah (N=45) were invited to participate. Based on a 2010 study using similar methodology, we calculated that a sample size of at least 1,600 cords would have 90% power to detect 33% higher rate of umbilical cords testing positive for any substance. Deidentified umbilical cords were collected from consecutive deliveries at participating hospitals. Prevalence of prenatal substance exposure was estimated statewide and by rurality using weighted analysis., Results: From November 2020 to November 2021, 1,748 cords (urban n=988, rural n=384, frontier n=376) were collected from 37 hospitals, representing 92% of hospitals that conduct 91% of births in the state. More than 99% of cords (n=1,739) yielded results. Statewide, 9.9% (95% CI 8.1-11.7%) were positive for at least one substance, most commonly opioids (7.0%, 95% CI 5.5-8.5%), followed by cannabinoid (11-nor-9-carboxy-delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol [THC-COOH]) (2.5%, 95% CI 1.6-3.4%), amphetamines (0.9%, 95% CI 0.4-1.5), benzodiazepines (0.5%, 95% CI 0.1-0.9%), alcohol (0.4%, 95% CI 0.1-0.7%), and cocaine (0.1%, 95% CI 0-0.3%). Cord positivity was similar by rurality (urban=10.3%, 95% CI 8.3-12.3%, rural=7.1%, 95% CI 3.5-10.7%, frontier=9.2%, 95% CI 6.2-12.2%, P=.31) and did not differ by substance type. Compared with a previous study, prenatal exposure to any substance (6.8 vs 9.9%, P=.01), opioids (4.7 vs 7.0% vs 4.7%, P=.03), amphetamines (0.1 vs 0.9%, P=.01) and THC-COOH (0.5 vs 2.5%, P<.001) increased., Conclusion: Prenatal substance exposure was detected in nearly 1 in 10 births statewide., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure Funds were paid to University of Utah for Dr. Smid from Alydia Inc for being site PI for a study of the JADA device. Dr. Smid serves as a medical consultant for Gilead Science Inc for hepatitis C treatment in pregnancy. Dr. Metz reports receiving UpToDate royalties for two topics on VBAC and reports serving as a medical consultant to Pfizer for design of a SARS-CoV-2 vaccination trial in pregnancy. Funds for Dr. Metz were paid to her institution from Pfizer for being a site PI for an RSV vaccine trial and SARS-CoV-2 vaccine trial. Funds were paid to her institution from Gestvision (site PI for preeclampsia POC test). Drs. Metz and Smid also report money was paid to their institution from NIDA. The other authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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8. Noninvasive Prediction of Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection After Maternal Primary Infection.
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Rouse DJ, Fette LM, Hughes BL, Saade GR, Dinsmoor MJ, Reddy UM, Pass R, Allard D, Mallett G, Clifton RG, Saccoccio FM, Permar SR, Gyamfi-Bannerman C, Varner MW, Goodnight WH, Tita ATN, Costantine MM, Swamy GK, Heyborne KD, Chien EK, Chauhan SP, El-Sayed YY, Casey BM, Parry S, Simhan HN, Napolitano PG, and Macones GA
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- Adult, Cytomegalovirus Infections transmission, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Logistic Models, Male, Pregnancy, Reproducibility of Results, Clinical Decision Rules, Cytomegalovirus Infections congenital, Cytomegalovirus Infections diagnosis, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious, Prenatal Diagnosis methods
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Objective: To develop and internally validate a noninvasive method for the prediction of congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection after primary maternal CMV infection., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of a multicenter randomized placebo-controlled trial of CMV hyperimmune globulin to prevent congenital infection. Women were eligible if they had primary CMV infection, defined as detectable plasma CMV-specific immunoglobulin (Ig)M and CMV-specific IgG with avidity less than 50% before 24 weeks of gestation or IgG seroconversion before 28 weeks, and were carrying a singleton fetus without ultrasonographic findings suggestive of CMV infection. Antibody assays were performed in a single reference laboratory. Congenital infection was defined as CMV detection in amniotic fluid, neonatal urine or saliva, or postmortem tissue. Using backward elimination, we developed logit models for prediction of congenital infection using factors known at randomization. The performance of the model was assessed using leave-one-out cross-validation (a method of internal validation)., Results: Of 399 women enrolled in the trial, 344 (86%) had informative data for this analysis. Congenital infection occurred in 68 pregnancies (20%). The best performing model included government-assisted insurance, IgM index 4.5 or higher, IgG avidity less than 32%, and whether CMV was detectable by polymerase chain reaction in maternal plasma at the time of randomization. Cross-validation showed an average area under the curve of 0.76 (95% CI 0.70-0.82), indicating moderate discriminatory ability. More parsimonious one-, two-, and three-factor models performed significantly less well than the four-factor model. Examples of prediction with the four-factor model: for a woman with government-assisted insurance, avidity less than 32%, IgM index 4.5 or higher, and detectable plasma CMV, probability of congenital infection was 0.69 (95% CI 0.53-0.82); for a woman with private insurance, avidity 32% or greater, IgM index less than 4.5, and undetectable plasma CMV, probability of infection was 0.03 (95% CI 0.02-0.07)., Conclusion: We developed models to predict congenital CMV infection in the presence of primary maternal CMV infection and absence of ultrasonographic findings suggestive of congenital infection. These models may be useful for patient counseling and decision making., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure Brenna Hughes disclosed receiving funding from Merck, and she is a scientific advisor for the CMV program. She disclosed that this article includes unlabeled/investigational uses of IND, and the status of this is disclosed in the manuscript. Mara Dinsmoor received funds from law firms for expert review and Eli Lilly and Allergan for FDA-required postmarking monitoring. Robert Pass disclosed serving on the Scientific Advisory Board and receiving funding from Moderna. He has served as consultant to two firms for medical malpractice defense (no testimony and relationships are not ongoing). He has also held stock in Astra Zeneca. Rebecca Clifton disclosed that the article includes unlabeled/investigational uses of CMV hyperimmune globulin, and the status of this is disclosed in the manuscript. Frances Saccoccio disclosed that money was paid to their institution through a Derfner Research Foundation and Children's Hospital Miracle Network grants. Cynthia Gyamfi-Bannerman received funding from Medela and Hologic. Alan Tita disclosed that money was paid to his institution from Merck for Mothers and Pfizer. Kent Heyborne disclosed that the article includes unlabeled/investigational uses of IVIG for the prevention of congenital CMV infection, and the status of these is disclosed in the manuscript. The other authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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9. Outcomes in Twins Compared With Singletons Subsequent to Preterm Prelabor Rupture of Membranes.
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Fishel Bartal M, Ugwu LG, Grobman WA, Bailit JL, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade GR, and Rouse DJ
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- Adult, Chorioamnionitis epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Endometritis epidemiology, Enterocolitis, Necrotizing epidemiology, Female, Fetal Membranes, Premature Rupture mortality, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Perinatal Mortality, Pregnancy, Premature Birth epidemiology, Sepsis epidemiology, Venous Thromboembolism epidemiology, Wound Infection epidemiology, Young Adult, Fetal Membranes, Premature Rupture epidemiology, Pregnancy Outcome epidemiology, Pregnancy, Twin statistics & numerical data
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Objective: To compare maternal and neonatal outcomes after preterm prelabor rupture of membranes (PROM) from 23 to 34 weeks of gestation in twin compared with singleton gestations., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of an obstetric cohort of 115,502 individuals and their singleton or twin neonates born in 25 hospitals nationwide (2008-2011). Those with preterm PROM from 23 0/7 through 33 6/7 weeks of gestation were included; neonates with major fetal anomalies were excluded. The coprimary outcomes for this analysis were composite maternal morbidity (chorioamnionitis, blood transfusion, postpartum endometritis, wound infection, sepsis, venous thromboembolism, intensive care unit admission, or death) and composite major neonatal morbidity (persistent pulmonary hypertension, intraventricular hemorrhage grade III or IV, seizures, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, necrotizing enterocolitis stage II or III, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, stillbirth subsequent to admission, or neonatal death before discharge). Logistic regression was used to estimate unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios (ORs) with 95% CIs for twin compared with singleton gestations., Results: Of 1,531 (1.3%) individuals who met eligibility criteria for this analysis, 218 (14.2%) had twin gestations. The median gestational age at preterm PROM was similar between those with twins and singletons (31.2 weeks [interquartile range 27.4-32.9] vs 30.6 weeks [interquartile range 26.9-32.7], P=.23); however, those with twin gestations had a shorter median latency period (2.0 days [interquartile range 1.0-5.0] vs 3.0 days [interquartile range 2.0-8.0], P<.001). After adjustment for potential confounders, odds of experiencing composite maternal morbidity (17.9% vs 19.3%, adjusted OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.66-1.42) or composite neonatal morbidity (20.4% vs 20.5%, OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.72-1.31) did not differ between groups., Conclusion: In a large, diverse cohort, the likelihood of composite maternal or neonatal morbidity per fetus after preterm PROM was similar for twin and singleton gestations., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure Mona Prasad reports receiving money from Gilead for a medical consultancy. Alan T. N. Tita reports money was paid to his institution from the CDC and Pfizer (vaccine study). The other authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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10. Relationship Between Maternal Economic Vulnerability and Childhood Neurodevelopment at 2 and 5 Years of Life.
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Premkumar A, Mele L, Casey BM, Varner MW, Sorokin Y, Wapner RJ, Thorp JM Jr, Saade GR, Tita ATN, Rouse DJ, Sibai B, Costantine MM, Mercer BM, Tolosa JE, and Caritis SN
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- Adult, Child, Preschool, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications ethnology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, United States, Wechsler Scales, Child Development, Mothers, Poverty
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Objective: To assess the relationship between economic vulnerability during pregnancy and childhood neurodevelopment., Methods: This is a secondary analysis of two parallel multicenter, randomized, controlled trials of administration of levothyroxine to pregnant individuals with subclinical hypothyroidism or hypothyroxinemia in the United States. All participants who delivered a live, nonanomalous neonate and completed the WPPSI-III (Weschler Preschool & Primary Scale of Intelligence) at 5 years of life and the Bayley-III (Bayley Scales of Infant Development) test at 2 years were included. The primary outcome is WPPSI-III score. Secondary outcome included Bayley-III subtest scores. Multivariable analyses were used to assess the relationships between economic vulnerability during the index pregnancy-defined as a household income less than 200% of the estimated federal poverty level, part-time or no employment, and use of government insurance-and the prespecified outcomes. Tests of interaction were performed to assess whether the magnitude of association differed according to whether participants were married or completed more than a high school education. A sensitivity analysis was performed to limit the income criteria for economic vulnerability to household income of less than 100% of the estimated federal poverty level., Results: Of 955 participants who met inclusion criteria, 406 (42.5%) were considered economically vulnerable. In bivariate analysis, the WPPSI-III score and Bayley-III subtest scores were significantly lower among children of the economically vulnerable. For the WPPSI-III, Bayley-III cognitive subtest, and Bayley-III language subtest scores, the associations between economic vulnerability and lower childhood neurodevelopmental scores were primarily seen only among those who were married or completed more than a high school education (P for interaction<.05). A similar pattern was noted when restricting the income criteria for economic vulnerability to less than 100% of the federal poverty level., Conclusion: Economic vulnerability during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes in their children at 2 and 5 years of life, particularly among those who are married or completed more than a high school education., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure The authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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11. Intrapartum Resuscitation Interventions for Category II Fetal Heart Rate Tracings and Improvement to Category I.
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Reddy UM, Weiner SJ, Saade GR, Varner MW, Blackwell SC, Thorp JM Jr, Tita ATN, Miller RS, Peaceman AM, McKenna DS, Chien EKS, Rouse DJ, El-Sayed YY, Sorokin Y, and Caritis SN
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- Adult, Cardiotocography, Cesarean Section, Delivery, Obstetric, Female, Fetal Distress ethnology, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Fetal Distress therapy, Heart Rate, Fetal, Prenatal Care, Resuscitation
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Objective: To evaluate intrapartum resuscitation interventions and improvement in category II fetal heart rate (FHR) tracings., Methods: This secondary analysis of a randomized trial of intrapartum fetal electrocardiographic ST-segment analysis included all participants with category II FHR tracings undergoing intrauterine resuscitation: maternal oxygen, intravenous fluid bolus, amnioinfusion, or tocolytic administration. Fetal heart rate pattern-recognition software was used to confirm category II FHR tracings 30 minutes before intervention and to analyze the subsequent 60 minutes. The primary outcome was improvement to category I within 60 minutes. Secondary outcomes included FHR tracing improvement to category I 30-60 minutes after the intervention and composite neonatal outcome., Results: Of 11,108 randomized participants, 2,251 (20.3%) had at least one qualifying intervention for category II FHR tracings: 63.7% improved to category I within 60 minutes and 50.5% improved at 30-60 minutes. Only 3.4% underwent cesarean delivery and 4.1% an operative vaginal delivery for nonreassuring fetal status within 60 minutes after the intervention. Oxygen administration was the most common intervention (75.4%). Among American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists-defined subgroups that received oxygen, the absent FHR accelerations and absent-minimal FHR variability subgroup (n=332) was more likely to convert to category I within 60 minutes than the FHR accelerations or "moderate FHR variability" subgroup (n=1,919) (77.0% vs 63.0%, odds ratio [OR] 2.0, 95% CI 1.4-2.7). The incidence of composite neonatal adverse outcome for category II tracings was 2.9% (95% CI 2.2-3.7%) overall; 2.8% (95% CI 2.0-3.8%) for improvement to category I within 60 minutes (n=1,433); and 3.2% (95% CI 2.1-4.6%) for no improvement within 60 minutes (n=818). However, the group with improvement had 29% lower odds for higher level neonatal care (11.8% vs 15.9%, OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.55-0.91)., Conclusion: Nearly two thirds of category II FHR tracings improved to category I within 60 minutes of intervention with a relatively low overall rate of the composite neonatal adverse outcome., Funding Source: Funded in part by Neoventa Medical., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure Alan Tita reports his institution received funds from Pfizer. Russell Miller reports money was paid to him from Janssen Research & Development, LLC, for serving on their Advisory Board service (unrelated to this manuscript topic). He also received funds from UpToDate (chapter author unrelated to this manuscript topic). David McKenna's institution is a satellite site for The Ohio State University for the NICHD MFMU, which pays his institution for patients enrolled in MFMU studies. Edward Chien reports that money was paid to his institution from MetroHealth. The other authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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12. Association of Breastfeeding and Child IQ Score at Age 5 Years.
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Plunkett BA, Mele L, Casey BM, Varner MW, Sorokin Y, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Thorp JM Jr, Saade GR, Tita ATN, Rouse DJ, Sibai B, Mercer BM, Tolosa JE, and Caritis SN
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- Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Wechsler Scales, Breast Feeding, Child Development, Intellectual Disability
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Objective: To evaluate whether breastfeeding and its duration are associated with a reduced risk of low IQ scores or other neurodevelopmental problems., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of two parallel multicenter, double-blinded randomized controlled trials in which participants with a singleton pregnancy and either subclinical hypothyroidism or hypothyroxinemia were treated with thyroxine or placebo. Our primary outcome was a low IQ score (less than 85 on the WPPSI-III [Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence III] at age 5 years). Secondary outcomes included performance measures on other validated neurodevelopmental tests. Univariable and multivariable analyses were performed to evaluate the association between breastfeeding and neurodevelopmental outcomes. Stepwise backward proceeding linear and logistic regression models were used to develop the final adjusted models., Results: Of the 772 participants studied, 614 (80%) reported breastfeeding. Of these, 31% reported breastfeeding for less than 4 months, 19% for 4-6 months, 11% for 7-9 months, 15% for 10-12 months and 23% for more than 12 months. IQ scores were available for 756 children; mean age-5 scores were higher with any breastfeeding (96.7±15.1) than without (91.2±15.0, mean difference 5.5, 95% CI 2.8-8.2), and low IQ scores were less frequent with any breastfeeding (21.5%) than with no breastfeeding (36.2%, odds ratio 0.48, 95% CI 0.33-0.71). In adjusted analyses, breastfeeding remained associated with reduced odds of low IQ score (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.62, 95% CI 0.41-0.93), and each additional month of breastfeeding was associated with lower odds of a low IQ scores (aOR 0.97, 95% CI 0.939-0.996). No significant associations between breastfeeding and other neurodevelopmental outcomes were identified in adjusted analyses., Conclusion: Breastfeeding and its duration are associated with lower odds of low IQ score at age 5 years., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure The authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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13. Characteristics of Stillbirths Associated With Diabetes in a Diverse U.S. Cohort.
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Page JM, Allshouse AA, Cassimatis I, Smid MC, Arslan E, Thorsten V, Parker C, Varner MW, Dudley DJ, Saade GR, Goldenberg RL, Stoll BJ, Hogue CJ, Bukowski R, Conway D, Pinar H, Reddy UM, and Silver RM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Case-Control Studies, Diabetes, Gestational ethnology, Female, Humans, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced ethnology, Infant, Newborn, Middle Aged, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications ethnology, Pregnancy in Diabetics ethnology, Prenatal Care, Prospective Studies, Stillbirth ethnology, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Diabetes, Gestational epidemiology, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy in Diabetics epidemiology, Stillbirth epidemiology
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Objective: To characterize stillbirths associated with pregestational diabetes and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) in a large, prospective, U.S. case-control study., Methods: A secondary analysis of stillbirths among patients enrolled in a prospective; multisite; geographically, racially, and ethnically diverse case-control study in the United States was performed. Singleton gestations with complete information regarding diabetes status and with a complete postmortem evaluation were included. A standard evaluation protocol for stillbirth cases included postmortem evaluation, placental pathology, clinical testing as performed at the discretion of the health care professional, and a recommended panel of tests. A potential cause of death was assigned to stillbirth cases using a standardized classification tool. Demographic and delivery characteristics among women with pregestational diabetes and GDM were compared with characteristics of women with no diabetes in pairwise comparisons using χ or two-sample t tests as appropriate. Sensitivity analysis was performed excluding pregnancies with genetic conditions or major fetal malformations., Results: Of 455 stillbirth cases included in the primary analysis, women with stillbirth and diabetes were more likely to be older than 35 years and have a higher body mass index. They were also more likely to have a gestational hypertensive disorder than women without diabetes (28% vs 9.1%; P<.001). Women with pregestational diabetes had more large-for-gestational-age (LGA) neonates (26% vs 3.4%; P<.001). Stillbirths occurred more often at term in women with pregestational diabetes (36%) and those with GDM (52%). Maternal medical complications, including pregestational diabetes and others, were more often identified as a probable or possible cause of death among stillbirths with maternal diabetes (43% vs 4%, P<.001) as compared with stillbirths without diabetes., Conclusion: Compared with stillbirths in women with no diabetes, stillbirths among women with pregestational diabetes and GDM occur later in pregnancy and are associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, maternal medical complications, and LGA.
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- 2020
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14. Standardized Criteria for Review of Perinatal Suicides and Accidental Drug-Related Deaths.
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Smid MC, Maeda J, Stone NM, Sylvester H, Baksh L, Debbink MP, Varner MW, and Metz TD
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- Adult, Advisory Committees statistics & numerical data, Failure to Rescue, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Maternal Mortality trends, Mortality, Pregnancy, Utah epidemiology, Accident Prevention, Drug Misuse mortality, Drug Misuse prevention & control, Peer Review standards, Pregnancy Complications mortality, Pregnancy Complications prevention & control, Puerperal Disorders mortality, Suicide statistics & numerical data, Suicide Prevention
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Objective: To estimate the proportion of accidental drug-related deaths and suicides classified as pregnancy-related from 2013 to 2014 (preimplementation of standardized criteria) and 2015 to 2016 (postimplementation)., Methods: Based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention pregnancy-related death criteria, the Utah Perinatal Mortality Review Committee developed a standardized evaluation tool to assess accidental drug-related death and suicide beginning in 2015. We performed a retrospective case review of all pregnancy-associated deaths (those occurring during pregnancy or 1 year postpartum for any reason) and pregnancy-related deaths (those directly attributable to the pregnancy or postpartum events) evaluated by Utah's Perinatal Mortality Review Committee from 2013 to 2016. We compared the proportion of accidental drug-related deaths and suicides meeting pregnancy-related criteria preimplementation and postimplementation of a standardized criteria checklist tool using Fisher's exact test. We assessed the change in pregnancy-related mortality ratio in Utah from 2013 to 2014 and 2015 to 2016 using test of trend., Results: From 2013 to 2016, there were 80 pregnancy-associated deaths in Utah (2013-2014: n=40; 2015-2016: n=40), and 41 (51%) were pregnancy-related (2013-2014: n=15, 2015-2016: n=26). In 2013-2014 (preimplementation), 12 women died of drug-related deaths or suicides, and only two of these deaths were deemed pregnancy-related (17%). In 2015-2016 (postimplementation), 18 women died of drug-related deaths or suicide, and 94% (n=17/18) of these deaths met one or more of the pregnancy-related criteria on the checklist (P<.001). From 2013 to 2014 to 2015-2016, Utah's overall pregnancy-related mortality ratio more than doubled, from 11.8 of 100,000 to 25.7 of 100,000 (P=.08)., Conclusion: After application of standardized criteria, the Utah Perinatal Mortality Review Committee determined that pregnancy itself was the inciting event leading to the majority of accidental drug-related deaths or suicides among pregnant and postpartum women. Other maternal mortality review committees may consider a standardized approach to assessing perinatal suicides and accidental drug-related deaths.
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- 2020
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15. Neonatal and Maternal Composite Adverse Outcomes Among Low-Risk Nulliparous Women Compared With Multiparous Women at 39-41 Weeks of Gestation.
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Chauhan SP, Rice MM, Grobman WA, Bailit J, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade GR, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, Third, Risk Assessment, Young Adult, Infant, Newborn, Diseases epidemiology, Parity, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy Outcome
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Objective: To estimate whether the frequency of adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes differs between low-risk nulliparous and multiparous women at 39-41 weeks of gestation., Methods: This is a secondary analysis of an observational obstetrics cohort of maternal-neonatal dyads at 25 hospitals. Low-risk women with nonanomalous singletons who delivered between 39 0/7 and 41 6/7 weeks of gestation were included. The composite neonatal adverse outcome included 5-minute Apgar score less than five, ventilator support or cardiopulmonary resuscitation, seizure, hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, sepsis, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, persistent pulmonary hypertension, necrotizing enterocolitis, birth injury or perinatal death. The composite maternal adverse outcome included infection, third- or fourth-degree perineal laceration, thromboembolism, transfusion of blood products, or maternal death. Small for gestational age (SGA), large for gestational age (LGA), and shoulder dystocia requiring maneuvers were also evaluated. Multivariable regression was used to estimate adjusted relative risks (aRRs) and adjusted odds ratios (aORs) with 95% CIs., Results: Of the 115,502 women in the overall cohort, 39,870 (34.5%) met eligibility criteria for this analysis; 18,245 (45.8%) were nulliparous. The risk of the composite neonatal adverse outcome (1.5% vs 1.0%, aRR 1.80, 95% CI 1.48-2.19), composite maternal adverse outcome (15.1% vs 3.3%, aRR 5.04, 95% CI 4.62-5.49), and SGA (8.9% vs 5.8%, aOR 1.45, 95% CI 1.33-1.57) was significantly higher in nulliparous than multiparous patients. The risk of LGA (aOR 0.65, 95% CI 0.60-0.71) and shoulder dystocia with maneuvers (aRR 0.68, 95% CI 0.60-0.77) was significantly lower in nulliparous rather than multiparous patients., Conclusion: The risk of composite adverse outcomes and SGA among low-risk nulliparous women at 39-41 weeks of gestation is significantly higher than among multiparous counterparts. However, nulliparous women had a lower risk of shoulder dystocia with maneuvers and LGA.
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- 2020
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16. Cost of Elective Labor Induction Compared With Expectant Management in Nulliparous Women.
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Einerson BD, Nelson RE, Sandoval G, Esplin MS, Branch DW, Metz TD, Silver RM, Grobman WA, Reddy UM, and Varner M
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- Adult, Elective Surgical Procedures, Female, Hospital Costs statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Labor, Obstetric, Maternal-Child Health Services statistics & numerical data, Parity, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, Utah, Young Adult, Labor, Induced economics, Watchful Waiting economics
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Objective: To compare the actual health-system cost of elective labor induction at 39 weeks of gestation with expectant management., Methods: This was an economic analysis of patients enrolled in the five Utah hospitals participating in a multicenter randomized trial of elective labor induction at 39 weeks of gestation compared with expectant management in low-risk nulliparous women. The entire trial enrolled more than 6,000 patients. For this subset, 1,201 had cost data available. The primary outcome was relative direct health care costs of maternal and neonatal care from a health system perspective. Secondary outcomes included the costs of each phase of maternal and neonatal care. Direct health system costs of maternal and neonatal care were measured using advanced costing analytics from the time of randomization at 38 weeks of gestation until exit from the study up to 8 weeks postpartum. Costs in each randomization arm were compared using generalized linear models and reported as the relative cost of induction compared with expectant management. With a fixed sample size, we had adequate power to detect a 7.3% or greater difference in overall costs., Results: The total cost of elective induction was no different than expectant management (mean difference +4.7%; 95% CI -2.1% to +12.0%; P=.18). Maternal outpatient antenatal care costs were 47.0% lower in the induction arm (95% CI -58.3% to -32.6%; P<.001). Maternal inpatient intrapartum and delivery care costs, conversely, were 16.9% higher among women undergoing labor induction (95% CI +5.5% to +29.5%; P=.003). Maternal inpatient postpartum care, maternal outpatient care after discharge, neonatal hospital care, and neonatal care after discharge did not differ between arms., Conclusion: Total costs of elective labor induction and expectant management did not differ significantly. These results challenge the assumption that elective induction of labor leads to significant cost escalation.
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- 2020
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17. Hepatitis C Virus Antibody Screening in a Cohort of Pregnant Women: Identifying Seroprevalence and Risk Factors.
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Prasad M, Saade GR, Sandoval G, Hughes BL, Reddy UM, Mele L, Salazar A, Varner MW, Gyamfi-Bannerman C, Thorp JM Jr, Tita ATN, Swamy GK, Chien EK, Casey BM, Peaceman AM, El-Sayed YY, Iams JD, Gibbs RS, Sibai B, Wiese N, Kamili S, and Macones GA
- Subjects
- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Cohort Studies, Female, Hepatitis C blood, Hepatitis C ethnology, Hepatitis C immunology, Hepatitis C Antibodies blood, Humans, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical prevention & control, Mass Screening, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious blood, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious ethnology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious immunology, Risk Factors, Seroepidemiologic Studies, United States epidemiology, Hepatitis C epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious epidemiology, Prenatal Care
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody, evaluate current risk factors associated with HCV antibody positivity, and identify novel composite risk factors for identification of groups most likely to demonstrate HCV antibody seropositivity in an obstetric population from 2012 to 2015., Methods: The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units Network initiated an observational study of mother-to-child transmission of HCV in 2012 that included offering HCV antibody screening to their entire obstetric population. Women presenting for prenatal care before 23 weeks of gestation without a known multifetal gestation were eligible. For each woman who was HCV antibody-positive, two women at similar gestational age who were HCV antibody-negative were identified and included for comparison. Risk factors were evaluated by patient interview and chart review. Women in the case group were identified to have a signal-to-cutoff value of at least 5 on the Abbott ARCHITECT platform. RNA status was evaluated for women in the case group., Results: Of 106,842 women screened for the HCV antibody, 254 had positive results. The HCV antibody seroprevalence rate was 2.4 cases per 1,000 women (95% CI 2.1-2.7). One hundred thirty-one women in the case group and 251 women in the control group were included in the case-control analysis. Factors associated with HCV antibody positivity included injection drug use (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 22.9, 95% CI 8.2-64.0), blood transfusion (aOR 3.7, 95% CI 1.3-10.4), having a partner with HCV (aOR 6.3, 95% CI 1.8-22.6), more than three lifetime sexual partners (aOR 5.3, 95% CI 1.4-19.8), and smoking (aOR 2.4, 95% CI 1.2-4.6). A composite of any of these potential risk factors provided the highest sensitivity for detecting HCV antibody (75/82 cases, 91%)., Conclusion: In this cohort, the seroprevalence of HCV antibody was low, and the current risk factors for HCV screening were not identified. These findings may be useful in defining new strategies for identifying mothers with the HCV antibody and the neonates susceptible to maternal transmission of HCV., Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01959321.
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- 2020
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18. Effect of Thyroxine Therapy on Depressive Symptoms Among Women With Subclinical Hypothyroidism.
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Costantine MM, Smith K, Thom EA, Casey BM, Peaceman AM, Varner MW, Sorokin Y, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Boggess K, Tita ATN, Rouse DJ, Sibai B, Iams JD, Mercer BM, Tolosa JE, Caritis SN, and VanDorsten JP
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Depressive Disorder psychology, Female, Humans, Hypothyroidism psychology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications psychology, Pregnancy Trimester, Third, Psychometrics, Treatment Outcome, Depressive Disorder drug therapy, Hypothyroidism drug therapy, Pregnancy Complications drug therapy, Prenatal Care, Thyroxine therapeutic use
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Objective: To estimate the effect of antenatal treatment of subclinical hypothyroidism on maternal depressive symptoms., Methods: We conducted an ancillary study to a multicenter trial in women with singleton pregnancies diagnosed with subclinical hypothyroidism randomized to antenatal thyroxine therapy or placebo. Treatment was discontinued at the end of pregnancy. Women with overt thyroid disease, diabetes, autoimmune disease, and those diagnosed with depression were excluded. Participants were assessed for depressive symptoms using the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression scale (CES-D) before starting the study drug (between 11 and 20 weeks of gestation), between 32 and 38 weeks of gestation, and at 1 year postpartum. The primary outcome was maternal depressive symptoms score as assessed using the CES-D. Secondary outcome was the percentage of women who scored 16 or higher on the CES-D, as such a score is considered screen-positive for depression., Results: Two hundred forty-five (36.2% of parent trial) women with subclinical hypothyroidism were allocated to thyroxine (n=124) or placebo (n=121). Median CES-D scores and the proportion of participants with positive scores were similar at baseline between the two groups. Treatment with thyroxine was not associated with differences in CES-D scores (10 [5-15] vs 10 [5-17]; P=.46) or in odds of screening positive in the third trimester compared with placebo, even after adjusting for baseline scores (24.3% vs 30.1%, adjusted odds ratio 0.63, 95% CI 0.31-1.28, P=.20). At 1 year postpartum, CES-D scores were not different (6 [3-11] vs 6 [3-12]; P=.79), nor was the frequency of screen-positive CES-D scores in the treated compared with the placebo group (9.7% vs 15.8%; P=.19). Treatment with thyroxine during pregnancy was also not associated with differences in odds of screening positive at the postpartum visit compared with placebo even after adjusting for baseline scores. Sensitivity analysis including women who were diagnosed with depression by the postpartum visit did not change the results., Conclusions: This study did not achieve its planned sample size, thus our conclusions may be limited, but in this cohort of pregnant women with subclinical hypothyroidism, antenatal thyroxine replacement did not improve maternal depressive symptoms.
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- 2020
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19. Association Between Time of Day and the Decision for an Intrapartum Cesarean Delivery.
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Son M, Lai Y, Bailit J, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Clinical Decision-Making, Dystocia surgery, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Young Adult, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling
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Objective: To examine whether the decision and indications for performing intrapartum cesarean delivery vary by time of day., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of a multicenter observational cohort of 115,502 deliveries (2008-2011), including nulliparous women with term, singleton, nonanomalous live gestations in vertex presentation who were attempting labor. Those who attempted home birth, or underwent cesarean delivery scheduled or decided less than 30 minutes after admission were excluded. Time of day was defined as cesarean delivery decision time among those who delivered by cesarean and delivery time among those who delivered vaginally, categorized by each hour of a 24-hour day. Primary outcomes were decision to perform cesarean delivery and the indications for cesarean delivery (labor dystocia, nonreassuring fetal status, or other indications). Secondary outcomes included whether a dystocia indication adhered to standards promoted to reduce cesarean delivery rates. Bivariate analyses were performed using χ and Kruskal-Wallis tests for categorical and continuous outcomes, respectively, and generalized additive models with smoothing splines explored nonlinear associations without adjustment for other factors., Results: Seven thousand nine hundred fifty-six (22.1%) of 36,014 eligible women underwent cesarean delivery. Decision for cesarean delivery (P<.001) decreased from midnight (21.2%) to morning, reaching a nadir at 10:00 (17.9%) and subsequently rising to peak at 21:00 (26.2%). The frequency of cesarean delivery for dystocia also was significantly associated with time of day (P<.001) in a pattern mirroring overall cesarean delivery. Among cesarean deliveries for dystocia (n=5,274), decision for cesarean delivery at less than 5 cm dilation (P<.001), median duration from 5 cm dilation to cesarean delivery decision (P=.003), and median duration from complete dilation to cesarean delivery decision (P=.014) all significantly differed with time of day. The frequency of nonreassuring fetal status and "other" indications were not significantly associated with time of day (P>.05)., Conclusion: Among nulliparous women who were attempting labor at term, the decision to perform cesarean delivery, particularly for dystocia, varied with time of day. Some of these differences correlate with labor management differences, given the changing frequency of latent phase cesarean delivery and median time in active phase.
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- 2020
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20. Stillbirth Associated With Infection in a Diverse U.S. Cohort.
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Page JM, Bardsley T, Thorsten V, Allshouse AA, Varner MW, Debbink MP, Dudley DJ, Saade GR, Goldenberg RL, Stoll B, Hogue CJ, Bukowski R, Conway D, Reddy UM, and Silver RM
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- Adult, Cause of Death, Cohort Studies, Cytomegalovirus Infections ethnology, Cytomegalovirus Infections mortality, Demography, Escherichia coli Infections ethnology, Escherichia coli Infections mortality, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious ethnology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious microbiology, Prenatal Care, Prospective Studies, Socioeconomic Factors, Stillbirth ethnology, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious mortality, Stillbirth epidemiology
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Objective: To better characterize infection-related stillbirth in terms of pathogenesis and microbiology., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of 512 stillbirths in a prospective, multisite, geographically, racially and ethnically diverse, population-based study of stillbirth in the United States. Cases underwent evaluation that included maternal interview, chart abstraction, biospecimen collection, fetal autopsy, and placental pathology. Recommended evaluations included syphilis and parvovirus serology. Each case was assigned probable and possible causes of death using the INCODE Stillbirth Classification System. Cases where infection was assigned as a probable or possible cause of death were reviewed. For these cases, clinical scenario, autopsy, maternal serology, culture results, and placental pathology were evaluated., Results: For 66 (12.9%) cases of stillbirth, infection was identified as a probable or possible cause of death. Of these, 36% (95% CI 35-38%) were categorized as a probable and 64% (95% CI 62-65%) as a possible cause of death. Infection-related stillbirth occurred earlier than non-infection-related stillbirth (median gestational age 22 vs 28 weeks, P=.001). Fetal bacterial culture results were available in 47 cases (71%), of which 35 (53%) grew identifiable organisms. The predominant species were Escherichia coli (19, 29%), group B streptococcus (GBS) (8, 12%), and enterococcus species (8, 12%). Placental pathology revealed chorioamnionitis in 50 (76%), funisitis in 27 (41%), villitis in 11 (17%), deciduitis in 35 (53%), necrosis in 27 (41%), and viral staining in seven (11%) cases. Placental pathology found inflammation or evidence of infection in 65 (99%) cases and fetal autopsy in 26 (39%) cases. In infection-related stillbirth cases, the likely causative nonbacterial organisms identified were parvovirus in two (3%) cases, syphilis in one (2%) case, cytomegalovirus (CMV) in five (8%) cases, and herpes in one (2%) case., Conclusion: Of infection-related stillbirth cases in a large U.S. cohort, E coli, GBS, and enterococcus species were the most common bacterial pathogens and CMV the most common viral pathogen.
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- 2019
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21. Association of Labor With Neonatal Respiratory Outcomes at 36-40 Weeks of Gestation.
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Plunkett BA, Sandoval G, Bailit JL, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade GR, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Diabetes, Gestational physiopathology, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Logistic Models, Odds Ratio, Pregnancy, Gestational Age, Labor, Obstetric, Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Newborn etiology
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Objective: To evaluate whether labor is associated with lower odds of respiratory morbidity among neonates born from 36 to 40 weeks of gestation and to assess whether this association varies by gestational age and maternal diabetic status., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of women in the Assessment of Perinatal Excellence obstetric cohort who delivered across 25 U.S. hospitals over a 3-year period. Women with a singleton liveborn nonanomalous neonate who delivered from 36 to 40 weeks of gestation were included in our analysis. Those who received antenatal corticosteroids, underwent amniocentesis for fetal lung maturity, or did not meet dating criteria were excluded. Our primary outcome was composite neonatal respiratory morbidity, which included respiratory distress syndrome, ventilator support, continuous positive airway pressure, or neonatal death. Maternal characteristics and neonatal outcomes between women who labored and those who did not were compared. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to evaluate the association between labor and the primary outcome. Interactions between labor and diabetes mellitus and labor and gestational age were tested., Results: Our analysis included 63,187 women who underwent labor and 10,629 who did not. There was no interaction between labor and diabetes mellitus (P=.90). However, there was a significant interaction between labor and gestational age (P=.01). In the adjusted model, labor was associated with lower odds of neonatal respiratory morbidity compared with no labor for neonates delivered from 36-39 weeks of gestation. A 1-week increase in gestational age was associated with a 1.2 times increase in the adjusted odds ratio for the neonatal outcome comparing labor and no labor., Conclusion: Labor was associated with lower odds of the composite outcome among neonates delivered from 36-39 weeks of gestation. The magnitude of this association varied by gestational age. The association was similar for women with or without diabetes mellitus.
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- 2019
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22. Pregnancy-Associated Death in Utah: Contribution of Drug-Induced Deaths.
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Smid MC, Stone NM, Baksh L, Debbink MP, Einerson BD, Varner MW, Gordon AJ, and Clark EAS
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- Adolescent, Adult, Databases, Factual, Female, Humans, Population Surveillance methods, Pregnancy Complications mortality, Pregnancy Outcome, Retrospective Studies, Utah epidemiology, Young Adult, Analgesics, Opioid adverse effects, Maternal Mortality, Opioid-Related Disorders mortality, Pregnancy statistics & numerical data
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Objective: Drug-induced deaths, defined as intentional or unintentional consumption of illicit substances or diverted medications leading to death, are the leading cause of death for reproductive-age women in the United States. Our objective was to describe pregnancy-associated deaths attributed to drug-induced causes to identify opportunities for intervention., Methods: Using the Utah Perinatal Morality Review Committee database, we performed a retrospective cohort study of all pregnancy-associated deaths-death of a woman during pregnancy or within 1 year from the end of pregnancy-from 2005 to 2014. We performed a detailed descriptive analysis of women with drug-induced deaths. We compared characteristics of women with drug-induced and other pregnancy-associated deaths., Results: From 2005 to 2014, 136 pregnancy-associated deaths were identified. Drug-induced death was the leading cause of pregnancy-associated death (n=35, 26%) and 89% occurred in the postpartum period. More specifically, those with a drug-induced death were more likely to die in the late postpartum period, defined as death occurring within 43 days to 1 year of the end of the pregnancy, (n=28/35, 80%) compared with women whose deaths were from other pregnancy-associated causes (n=34/101, 34%) (P<.001). The majority of drug-induced deaths were attributed to opioids (n=27/35, 77%), prescription opioids (n=21/35, 60%), and polysubstance use (n=29/35, 83%). From 2005 to 2014, the pregnancy-associated mortality ratio increased 76%, from 23.3 in 2005 to 41.0 in 2014. During this same time period, the drug-induced pregnancy-associated mortality ratio increased 200%, from 3.9 in 2005 to 11.7 in 2014., Conclusion: Drug-induced death is the leading cause of pregnancy-associated death in Utah and occurs primarily in the late postpartum period. Interventional studies focused on identifying and treating women at risk of drug-induced death are urgently needed.
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- 2019
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23. Daytime Compared With Nighttime Differences in Management and Outcomes of Postpartum Hemorrhage.
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Yee LM, McGee P, Bailit JL, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Leveno KJ, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, United States, Delivery, Obstetric, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Perinatal Care standards, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling statistics & numerical data, Postpartum Hemorrhage therapy
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Objective: To assess whether postpartum hemorrhage management or subsequent morbidity differs based on whether delivery occurred during the day or night., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of a multicenter observational obstetric cohort of more than 115,000 mother-neonate pairs from 25 hospitals (2008-2011). This analysis included women delivering singleton or twin births who experienced postpartum hemorrhage (estimated blood loss greater than 500 cc for vaginal delivery, estimated blood loss greater than 1,000 cc for cesarean delivery, or documented treatment for postpartum hemorrhage). Nighttime delivery was defined as that occurring between 8 PM and 6 AM. The primary outcome was a composite of maternal morbidity (death, hysterectomy, intensive care unit admission, transfusion, or unanticipated procedure for bleeding). Secondary outcomes included estimated blood loss, uterotonic use, and procedures to treat bleeding that occurred during the postpartum hospitalization. Multivariable logistic, linear, quantile, and multinomial regression models were used to assess associations between nighttime delivery and outcomes, adjusting for potential patient-level confounders and hospital as a fixed effect., Results: In total, 2,709 (34.2%) of 7,917 women with postpartum hemorrhage delivered at night. Women who delivered at night were younger, had a lower body mass index, and were more likely to have government-sponsored insurance, be nulliparous, have hypertension, use neuraxial analgesia, and deliver vaginally. After adjusting for potential confounders, the primary composite outcome of maternal morbidity was similar regardless of night compared with day delivery (15.5% night vs 17.5% day; adjusted odds ratio 0.89, 95% CI 0.77-1.03). Some secondary outcomes, including mean EBL, frequency of uterotonic use, and time from delivery to first uterotonic dose, differed on unadjusted analyses, but these associations did not persist in multivariable analysis. The study had limited power to assess differences in uncommon outcomes., Conclusion: Nighttime delivery was not associated with significant differences in postpartum hemorrhage-related management or morbidity.
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- 2019
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24. Association Between Gestational Weight Gain and Perinatal Outcomes.
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Kominiarek MA, Saade G, Mele L, Bailit J, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Gestational Weight Gain, Pregnancy Outcome epidemiology
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Objective: To evaluate the association between gestational weight gain and maternal and neonatal outcomes in a large, geographically diverse cohort., Methods: Trained chart abstractors at 25 hospitals obtained maternal and neonatal data for all deliveries on randomly selected days over 3 years (2008-2011). Gestational weight gain was derived using weight at delivery minus prepregnancy or first-trimester weight and categorized as below, within, or above the Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines in this retrospective cohort study. Maternal (primary or repeat cesarean delivery, third- or fourth-degree lacerations, severe postpartum hemorrhage, hypertensive disease of pregnancy) and neonatal (preterm birth, shoulder dystocia, macrosomia, hypoglycemia) outcomes were compared among women in the gestational weight gain categories in unadjusted and adjusted analyses with odds ratios (ORs) and 95% CI reported. Covariates included age, race-ethnicity, tobacco use, insurance type, parity, prior cesarean delivery, pregestational diabetes, hypertension, and hospital type., Results: Of the 29,861 women included, 51% and 21% had gestational weight gain above and below the guidelines, respectively. There was an association between gestational weight gain above the IOM guidelines and cesarean delivery in both nulliparous women (adjusted OR 1.44, 95% CI 1.31-1.59) and multiparous women (adjusted OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.13-1.41) and hypertensive diseases of pregnancy in nulliparous and multiparous women combined (adjusted OR 1.84, 95% CI 1.66-2.04). For the neonatal outcomes, gestational weight gain above the IOM guidelines was associated with shoulder dystocia (adjusted OR 1.74, 95% CI 1.41-2.14), macrosomia (adjusted OR 2.66, 95% CI 2.03-3.48), and neonatal hypoglycemia (adjusted OR 1.60, 95% CI 1.16-2.22). Gestational weight gain below the guidelines was associated with spontaneous (adjusted OR 1.50, 95% CI 1.31-1.73) and indicated (adjusted OR 1.34, 95% CI 1.12-1.60) preterm birth., Conclusion: In a large, diverse cohort with prospectively collected data, gestational weight gain below or above guidelines is associated with a variety of adverse pregnancy outcomes.
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- 2018
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25. Variation in the Nulliparous, Term, Singleton, Vertex Cesarean Delivery Rate.
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Pasko DN, McGee P, Grobman WA, Bailit JL, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Leveno KJ, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Parity, Pregnancy, Term Birth, United States, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Delivery, Obstetric statistics & numerical data, Hospitals statistics & numerical data
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Objective: To estimate the contributions of patient and health care provider-hospital characteristics to the variation in the frequency of nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex cesarean delivery in a multi-institutional U.S. cohort., Methods: We performed a secondary analysis of the multicenter Assessment of Perinatal Excellence cohort of 115,502 mother and neonatal pairs who were delivered at 25 hospitals between March 2008 and February 2011. Women met inclusion criteria if they were nulliparous and delivered a singleton in vertex presentation at term. Hospital ranks for nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex cesarean delivery frequency were determined after risk adjustment. The fraction of variation in nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex cesarean delivery frequency attributable to patient and health care provider-hospital characteristics was assessed using hierarchical logistic regression., Results: Of the 115,502 deliveries in the initial cohort, 38,275 nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex deliveries met inclusion criteria. The median hospital nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex cesarean delivery frequency was 25.3% with a range from 15.0% to 35.2%. The majority of hospitals (16/25) changed rank quintiles after risk adjustment; overall the changes in rank were not statistically significant (P=.53). Patient characteristics accounted for 24% of the nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex cesarean delivery variation. The analyzed health care provider-hospital characteristics were not significantly associated with cesarean delivery frequency., Conclusion: Although patient characteristics accounted for some of the variation in nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex cesarean delivery frequency and accounting for case mix had implications for hospital cesarean delivery rankings, the majority of the variation was not explained by the characteristics evaluated. These findings emphasize the importance of continued efforts to understand aspects of obstetric care, including case mix, that contribute to cesarean delivery variation.
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- 2018
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26. Pregnancy-Associated Hypertension and Offspring Cardiometabolic Health.
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Rice MM, Landon MB, Varner MW, Casey BM, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Rouse DJ, Tita ATN, Thorp JM Jr, Chien EK, Saade G, Peaceman AM, and Blackwell SC
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- Blood Glucose, Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Child, Child, Preschool, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Triglycerides blood, Waist Circumference, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced, Metabolic Diseases epidemiology, Pre-Eclampsia
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Objective: To evaluate whether pregnancy-associated hypertension (gestational hypertension and preeclampsia) was associated with the cardiometabolic health of young offspring., Methods: This was a prospective observational follow-up study from 2012 to 2013 of children born to women previously enrolled in a mild gestational diabetes mellitus treatment trial or nongestational diabetes mellitus observational study. At 5-10 years after birth, children were examined and fasting blood samples obtained to determine the following cardiometabolic risk factors: blood pressure (BP), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose, homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance, waist circumference, and body mass index (BMI)., Results: This analysis included 979 children evaluated at a median 7 years of age. Twenty-three (2%) were born preterm from a hypertensive pregnancy, 73 (7%) were born at term from a hypertensive pregnancy, 58 (6%) were born preterm from a normotensive pregnancy, and 825 (84%) were born at term from a normotensive pregnancy (reference group). After adjusting for confounding factors, mean adjusted systolic BP was significantly higher in the children who were born at term to mothers who experienced pregnancy-associated hypertension compared with those born at term to normotensive mothers (systolic BP of 104 mm Hg, 95% CI 101-106 vs systolic BP of 99 mm Hg, 95% CI 99-100, P=.001). No other significant differences were observed., Conclusion: Pregnancy-associated hypertension in women who deliver at term was associated with higher systolic BP in the offspring, but not with their measures of diastolic BP, BMI, waist circumference, homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance, glucose, or lipids., Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00069576.
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- 2018
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27. Potentially Preventable Stillbirth in a Diverse U.S. Cohort.
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Page JM, Thorsten V, Reddy UM, Dudley DJ, Hogue CJR, Saade GR, Pinar H, Parker CB, Conway D, Stoll BJ, Coustan D, Bukowski R, Varner MW, Goldenberg RL, Gibbins K, and Silver RM
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Health Behavior, Health Status, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Maternal Age, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Young Adult, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications prevention & control, Stillbirth
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Objective: To estimate the proportion of potentially preventable stillbirths in the United States., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of 512 stillbirths with complete evaluation enrolled in the Stillbirth Collaborative Research Network from 2006 to 2008. The Stillbirth Collaborative Research Network was a multisite, geographically, racially, and ethnically diverse, population-based case-control study of stillbirth in the United States. Cases of stillbirth underwent standard evaluation that included maternal interview, medical record abstraction, biospecimen collection, postmortem examination, placental pathology, and clinically recommended evaluation. Each stillbirth was assigned probable and possible causes of death using the Initial Causes of Fetal Death algorithm system. For this analysis, we defined potentially preventable stillbirths as those occurring in nonanomalous fetuses, 24 weeks of gestation or greater, and weighing 500 g or greater that were 1) intrapartum, 2) the result of medical complications, 3) the result of placental insufficiency, 4) multiple gestation (excluding twin-twin transfusion), 5) the result of spontaneous preterm birth, or 6) the result of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy., Results: Of the 512 stillbirths included in our cohort, causes of potentially preventable stillbirth included placental insufficiency (65 [12.7%]), medical complications of pregnancy (31 [6.1%]), hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (20 [3.9%]), preterm labor (16 [3.1%]), intrapartum (nine [1.8%]), and multiple gestations (four [0.8%]). Twenty-seven stillbirths fit two or more categories, leaving 114 (22.3%) potentially preventable stillbirths., Conclusion: Based on our definition, almost one fourth of stillbirths are potentially preventable. Given the predominance of placental insufficiency among stillbirths, identification and management of placental insufficiency may have the most immediate effect on stillbirth reduction.
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- 2018
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28. Racial and Ethnic Differences in Utilization of Labor Management Strategies Intended to Reduce Cesarean Delivery Rates.
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Yee LM, Costantine MM, Rice MM, Bailit J, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Ethnicity, Female, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Humans, Patient Preference ethnology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Cesarean Section methods, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Patient Care Management organization & administration, Pregnant People ethnology, Pregnant People psychology, Preventive Health Services methods, Preventive Health Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To examine whether racial and ethnic differences exist in the frequency of and indications for cesarean delivery and to assess whether application of labor management strategies intended to reduce cesarean delivery rates is associated with patient's race and ethnicity., Methods: This is a secondary analysis of a multicenter observational obstetric cohort. Trained research personnel abstracted maternal and neonatal records of greater than 115,000 pregnant women from 25 hospitals (2008-2011). Women at term with singleton, nonanomalous, vertex, liveborn neonates were included in two cohorts: 1) nulliparous women (n=35,529); and 2) multiparous women with prior vaginal deliveries only (n=39,871). Women were grouped as non-Hispanic black, non-Hispanic white, Hispanic, and Asian. Multivariable logistic regression was used to evaluate the following outcomes: overall cesarean delivery frequency, indications for cesarean delivery, and utilization of labor management strategies intended to safely reduce cesarean delivery., Results: A total of 75,400 women were eligible for inclusion, of whom 47% (n=35,529) were in the nulliparous cohort and 53% (n=39,871) were in the multiparous cohort. The frequencies of cesarean delivery were 25.8% among nulliparous women and 6.0% among multiparous women. For nulliparous women, the unadjusted cesarean delivery frequencies were 25.0%, 28.3%, 28.7%, and 24.0% for non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, Asian, and Hispanic women, respectively. Among nulliparous women, the adjusted odds of cesarean delivery were higher in all racial and ethnic groups compared with non-Hispanic white women (non-Hispanic black adjusted odds ratio [OR] 1.47, 95% CI 1.36-1.59; Asian adjusted OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.14-1.40; Hispanic adjusted OR 1.17, 95% CI 1.07-1.27) as a result of greater odds of cesarean delivery both for nonreassuring fetal status and labor dystocia. Nonapplication of labor management strategies regarding failed induction, arrest of dilation, arrest of descent, or cervical ripening did not contribute to increased odds of cesarean delivery for non-Hispanic black and Hispanic women. Compared with non-Hispanic white women, Hispanic women were actually less likely to experience elective cesarean delivery (adjusted OR 0.60, 95% CI 0.42-0.87) or cesarean delivery for arrest of dilation before 4 hours (adjusted OR 0.67, 95% CI 0.49-0.92). Additionally, compared with non-Hispanic white women, Asian women were more likely to experience cesarean delivery for nonreassuring fetal status (adjusted OR 1.29, 95% CI 1.09-1.53) and to have had that cesarean delivery be performed in the setting of a 1-minute Apgar score 7 or greater (adjusted OR 1.79, 95% CI 1.07-3.00). A similar trend was seen among multiparous women with prior vaginal deliveries., Conclusion: Although racial and ethnic disparities exist in the frequency of cesarean delivery, differential use of labor management strategies intended to reduce the cesarean delivery rate does not appear to be associated with these racial and ethnic disparities.
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- 2017
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29. Neonatal Morbidity of Small- and Large-for-Gestational-Age Neonates Born at Term in Uncomplicated Pregnancies.
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Chauhan SP, Rice MM, Grobman WA, Bailit J, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Leveno KJ, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Delivery, Obstetric, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant Mortality, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, United States, Young Adult, Fetal Macrosomia mortality, Infant, Newborn, Diseases mortality, Infant, Small for Gestational Age
- Abstract
Objective: To compare morbidity among small-for-gestational-age (SGA; birth weight less than the 10th percentile for gestational age), appropriate-for-gestational-age (AGA; birth weight 10th to 90th percentile; reference group), and large-for-gestational-age (LGA; birth weight greater than the 90th percentile) neonates in apparently uncomplicated pregnancies at term (37 weeks of gestation or greater)., Methods: This secondary analysis, derived from an observational obstetric cohort of 115,502 deliveries, included women with apparently uncomplicated pregnancies of nonanomalous singletons who had confirmatory ultrasound dating no later than the second trimester and who delivered between 37 0/7 and 42 6/7 weeks of gestation. We used two different composite neonatal morbidity outcomes: hypoxic composite neonatal morbidity for SGA and traumatic composite neonatal morbidity for LGA neonates. Log Poisson relative risks (RRs) with 95% CIs adjusted for potential confounding factors (nulliparity, body mass index, insurance status, and neonatal sex) were calculated., Results: Among the 63,436 women who met our inclusion criteria, SGA occurred in 7.9% (n=4,983) and LGA in 8.3% (n=5,253). Hypoxic composite neonatal morbidity was significantly higher in SGA (1.1%) compared with AGA (0.7%; adjusted RR 1.44, 95% CI 1.07-1.93) but similar between LGA (0.6%) and AGA (adjusted RR 0.84, 95% CI 0.58-1.22). Traumatic composite neonatal morbidity was significantly higher in LGA (1.9%) than AGA (1.0%; adjusted RR 1.88, 95% CI 1.51-2.34) but similar in SGA (1.3%) compared with AGA (adjusted RR 1.28, 95% CI 0.98-1.67)., Conclusion: Among women with uncomplicated pregnancies, hypoxic composite neonatal morbidity is more common with SGA neonates and traumatic-composite neonatal morbidity is more common with LGA neonates.
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- 2017
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30. Route of Delivery in Women With Stillbirth: Results From the Stillbirth Collaborative Research Network.
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Boyle A, Preslar JP, Hogue CJ, Silver RM, Reddy UM, Goldenberg RL, Stoll BJ, Varner MW, Conway DL, Saade GR, Bukowski R, and Dudley DJ
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- Adult, Demography, Dystocia etiology, Female, Humans, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Socioeconomic Factors, United States epidemiology, Uterine Rupture etiology, Cesarean Section methods, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Delivery, Obstetric methods, Delivery, Obstetric statistics & numerical data, Dystocia surgery, Labor, Induced methods, Labor, Induced statistics & numerical data, Stillbirth epidemiology, Uterine Rupture surgery
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Objective: To describe delivery management of singleton stillbirths in a population-based, multicenter case series., Methods: We conducted a retrospective chart review of 611 women with singleton stillbirths at 20 weeks of gestation or greater from March 2006 to September 2008. Medical and delivery information was abstracted from medical records. Both antepartum and intrapartum stillbirths were included; these were analyzed both together and separately. The primary outcome was mode of delivery. Secondary outcomes included induction of labor and indications for cesarean delivery. Indications for cesarean delivery were classified as obstetric (abnormal fetal heart tracing before intrapartum demise, abruption, coagulopathy, uterine rupture, placenta previa, or labor dystocia) or nonobstetric (patient request, repeat cesarean delivery, or not documented)., Results: Of the 611 total cases of stillbirth, 93 (15.2%) underwent cesarean delivery, including 43.0% (46/107) of women with prior cesarean delivery and 9.3% (47/504) of women without prior cesarean delivery. No documented obstetric indication was evident for 38.3% (18/47) of primary and 78.3% (36/46) of repeat cesarean deliveries. Labor induction resulted in vaginal delivery for 98.5% (321/326) of women without prior cesarean delivery and 91.1% (41/45) of women with a history of prior cesarean delivery, including two women who had uterine rupture. Among women with a history of prior cesarean delivery who had spontaneous labor, 74.1% (20/27) delivered vaginally, with no cases of uterine rupture., Conclusion: Women with stillbirth usually delivered vaginally regardless of whether labor was spontaneous or induced or whether they had a prior cesarean delivery. However, 15% underwent cesarean delivery, often without a documented obstetric indication.
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- 2017
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31. Pregnancies After the Diagnosis of Mild Gestational Diabetes Mellitus and Risk of Cardiometabolic Disorders.
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Varner MW, Rice MM, Landon MB, Casey BM, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Rouse DJ, Tita ATN, Thorp JM, Chien EK, Saade GR, Peaceman AM, Blackwell SC, and Vandorsten JP
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- Adult, Blood Glucose analysis, Blood Pressure, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Diabetes, Gestational etiology, Diabetes, Gestational therapy, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Parity, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Triglycerides blood, Waist Circumference, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 etiology, Diabetes, Gestational blood, Metabolic Syndrome etiology, Postpartum Period blood
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Objective: To assess the association of subsequent pregnancy with subsequent metabolic syndrome and type II diabetes mellitus after a pregnancy complicated by mild gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM)., Methods: We conducted a prospective observational follow-up study of women with mild GDM randomized from 2002 to 2007 to usual care or dietary intervention and glucose self-monitoring. Women were evaluated 5-10 years after the parent study. Participants were grouped according to the number of subsequent pregnancies (group A, none [reference]; group B, one; group C, two or greater). Serum triglycerides, glucose tolerance, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, blood pressure, and waist circumference were assessed. Metabolic syndrome was diagnosed by American Heart Association and National Heart Lung and Blood Institute criteria. Multivariable regression was used to estimate adjusted relative risks (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs)., Results: Of 905 eligible women from the original trial, 483 agreed to participate, 426 of whom were included in this analysis. Groups A, B, and C consisted of 212, 143, and 71 women, respectively. Of women with subsequent pregnancies, 32% (69/214) had another pregnancy complicated with GDM. No difference between groups was observed for metabolic syndrome (group A, 34%; group B, 33%; group C, 30%). Subsequent pregnancies were associated with diabetes mellitus outside of pregnancy (group A, 5.2%; group B, 10.5%, RR 2.62, 95% CI 1.16-5.91; group C, 11.3%, RR 2.83, 95% CI 1.06-7.59), and if complicated with GDM (no subsequent GDM pregnancy, RR 1.99, 95% CI 0.82-4.84; subsequent GDM pregnancy, RR 3.75, 95% CI 1.60-8.82)., Conclusion: In women with prior mild GDM, subsequent pregnancies did not increase the frequency of metabolic syndrome, but subsequent pregnancies with GDM increased the risk of diabetes mellitus outside of pregnancy.
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- 2017
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32. In Reply.
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Theilen LH, Varner MW, Smith KR, and Esplin MS
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- 2016
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33. Relationship Between Excessive Gestational Weight Gain and Neonatal Adiposity in Women With Mild Gestational Diabetes Mellitus.
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Blackwell SC, Landon MB, Mele L, Reddy UM, Casey BM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Rouse DJ, Thorp JM Jr, Sciscione A, Catalano P, Saade G, Caritis SN, Sorokin Y, and Grobman WA
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- Adult, Body Mass Index, Cesarean Section, Diabetes, Gestational drug therapy, Female, Fetal Macrosomia physiopathology, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Obesity complications, Pre-Eclampsia epidemiology, Pregnancy, Young Adult, Adiposity, Birth Weight, Diabetes, Gestational physiopathology, Fetal Macrosomia epidemiology, Weight Gain
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Objective: To evaluate the relationships among excessive gestational weight gain, neonatal adiposity, and adverse obstetric outcomes in women with mild gestational diabetes mellitus., Methods: This is a secondary analysis of a multicenter randomized clinical trial of women with mild gestational diabetes mellitus. Based on self-reported prepregnancy body weight, gestational weight gain was categorized as excessive if it was greater than 2009 Institute of Medicine guidelines. Maternal outcomes and neonatal anthropomorphic characteristics were compared between women with excessive weight gain and those without excessive weight gain. Multiple linear and logistic regression analyses were performed to adjust for confounding factors., Results: We studied 841 women who participated in the main trial and had prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) and delivery information available (n=431 treatment group, n=410 no treatment). After adjustment for factors including treatment and prepregnancy BMI, excessive weight gain remained associated with large for gestational age (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2.94, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.81-4.93), birth weight greater than 4,000 g (adjusted OR 2.56, 95% CI 1.54-4.40), preeclampsia (adjusted OR 2.96, 95% CI 1.35-7.03), and cesarean delivery for labor arrest (adjusted OR 2.37, 95% CI 1.30-4.44). In addition, excessive weight gain was independently associated with increased total neonatal fat (P<.001) and birth weight (P<.001)., Conclusion: In women with both treated and untreated mild gestational diabetes mellitus, excessive gestational weight gain was independently associated with both greater birth weight and adiposity.
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- 2016
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34. Maternal and Neonatal Outcomes With Early Compared With Delayed Pushing Among Nulliparous Women.
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Yee LM, Sandoval G, Bailit J, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Delivery, Obstetric methods, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Labor Stage, Second, Parity, Postpartum Hemorrhage, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Labor, Obstetric
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Objective: To describe factors associated with delayed pushing and evaluate the relationship between delayed pushing and perinatal outcomes in nulliparous women with singleton term gestations., Methods: This was a secondary analysis of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Assessment of Perinatal Excellence cohort of 115,502 women and their neonates born in 25 U.S. hospitals from 2008 to 2011. Nulliparous women with singleton, cephalic, nonanomalous term births who achieved 10-cm cervical dilation were included. Women in whom pushing was delayed by 60 minutes or greater (delayed group) were compared with those who initiated pushing within 30 minutes (early group). Multivariable regression analyses were used to assess the independent association of delayed pushing with mode of delivery, length of the second stage, and other maternal and perinatal outcomes (significance defined as P<.05)., Results: Of 21,034 women in the primary analysis sample, pushing was delayed in 18.4% (n=3,870). Women who were older, privately insured, or non-Hispanic white as well as those who had induction or augmentation of labor, diabetes, or epidural analgesia were more likely to have delayed pushing. Delayed pushing was more common when the second stage began during daytime hours or in hospitals with dedicated 24-hour obstetric anesthesia, although differences were small. After adjusting for differences in baseline and labor characteristics including center, women in the delayed group had longer mean durations of the second stage (191 compared with 84 minutes, P<.001) and of active pushing (86 compared with 76 minutes, P<.001). Delayed pushing was associated with greater rates of cesarean delivery (11.2% compared with 5.1%; adjusted odds ratio [OR] 1.86, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.63-2.12), operative vaginal delivery (adjusted OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.14-1.40), postpartum hemorrhage (adjusted OR 1.43, 95% CI 1.05-1.95), and blood transfusion (adjusted OR 1.51, 95% CI 1.04-2.17). Delayed pushing was not associated with increased odds of adverse neonatal outcomes compared with early pushing., Conclusion: In this large birth cohort, delayed pushing was associated with longer second stage duration, increased odds of cesarean delivery, and increased odds of postpartum hemorrhage, but was not associated with neonatal morbidity.
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- 2016
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35. Pregnancy Outcomes in Women With a History of Previable, Preterm Prelabor Rupture of Membranes.
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Monson MA, Gibbons KJ, Esplin MS, Varner MW, and Manuck TA
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Premature Birth prevention & control, Recurrence, Retrospective Studies, Fetal Membranes, Premature Rupture physiopathology, Pregnancy Outcome
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Objective: To characterize subsequent pregnancy outcomes among women with a history of previable, preterm prelabor rupture of membranes (PROM) and assess factors associated with recurrent preterm birth., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of women cared for with a history of one or more singleton pregnancy complicated by preterm PROM at less than 24 weeks of gestation between 2002 and 2013 who were cared for in two tertiary care health systems by a single group of maternal-fetal medicine specialists. Women were identified using International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision codes and obstetric databases. Those with iatrogenic preterm PROM and those whose index preterm PROM at less than 24 weeks of gestation was preceded by advanced cervical dilation were excluded. All women with one or more pregnancies reaching the second trimester after an index previable, preterm PROM pregnancy were included. The primary outcome was recurrent preterm birth at less than 37 weeks of gestation. Data were analyzed by χ, Fisher exact, t test, Wilcoxon rank-sum, and logistic regression., Results: Two hundred ninety-four women had one or more pregnancies complicated by previable, preterm PROM. One hundred eight of 294 (37%) had one or more subsequent pregnancies in our health care systems and 50 of 108 (46%) had two or more. In the pregnancy immediately after the index delivery, the risk of prematurity was high: 50 (46%) delivered at less than 37 weeks of gestation, 31 (30%) at less than 34 weeks of gestation, 25 (23%) at less than 28 weeks of gestation, and 18 (17%) before 24 weeks of gestation. Fewer than half (n=49 [45%]) of women received preterm birth prophylaxis (progesterone or cerclage) in a subsequent pregnancy; rates of recurrent preterm birth were similar among women who received preterm birth prophylaxis compared with those who did not. In regression models, the only factor significantly associated with recurrent preterm birth at less than 37 weeks of gestation was a history of preterm birth preceding previable, preterm PROM delivery (adjusted odds ratio 3.23, 95% confidence interval 1.32-7.93)., Conclusion: Patients with a history of previable, preterm PROM are at high risk of recurrent preterm birth.
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- 2016
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36. Association of Recorded Estimated Fetal Weight and Cesarean Delivery in Attempted Vaginal Delivery at Term.
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Froehlich RJ, Sandoval G, Bailit JL, Grobman WA, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Nomograms, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome epidemiology, Risk Assessment methods, Risk Factors, Statistics as Topic, Term Birth, United States epidemiology, Birth Weight, Cesarean Section methods, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Fetal Weight, Ultrasonography, Prenatal methods, Ultrasonography, Prenatal statistics & numerical data
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Objective: To evaluate the association between documentation of estimated fetal weight, and its value, with cesarean delivery., Methods: This was a secondary analysis of a multicenter observational cohort of 115,502 deliveries from 2008 to 2011. Data were abstracted by trained and certified study personnel. We included women at 37 weeks of gestation or greater attempting vaginal delivery with live, nonanomalous, singleton, vertex fetuses and no history of cesarean delivery. Rates and odds ratios (ORs) were calculated for women with ultrasonography or clinical estimated fetal weight compared with women without documentation of estimated fetal weight. Further subgroup analyses were performed for estimated fetal weight categories (less than 3,500, 3,500-3,999, and 4,000 g or greater) stratified by diabetic status. Multivariable analyses were performed to adjust for important potential confounding variables., Results: We included 64,030 women. Cesarean delivery rates were 18.5% in the ultrasound estimated fetal weight group, 13.4% in the clinical estimated fetal weight group, and 11.7% in the no documented estimated fetal weight group (P<.001). After adjustment (including for birth weight), the adjusted OR of cesarean delivery was 1.44 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.31-1.58, P<.001) for women with ultrasound estimated fetal weight and 1.08 for clinical estimated fetal weight (95% CI 1.01-1.15, P=.017) compared with women with no documented estimated fetal weight (referent). The highest estimates of fetal weight conveyed the greatest odds of cesarean delivery. When ultrasound estimated fetal weight was 4,000 g or greater, the adjusted OR was 2.15 (95% CI 1.55-2.98, P<.001) in women without diabetes and 9.00 (95% CI 3.65-22.17, P<.001) in women with diabetes compared to those with estimated fetal weight less than 3,500 g., Conclusion: In this contemporary cohort of women attempting vaginal delivery at term, documentation of estimated fetal weight (obtained clinically or, particularly, by ultrasonography) was associated with increased odds of cesarean delivery. This relationship was strongest at higher fetal weight estimates, even after controlling for the effects of birth weight and other factors associated with increased cesarean delivery risk.
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- 2016
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37. All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality After Hypertensive Disease of Pregnancy.
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Theilen LH, Fraser A, Hollingshaus MS, Schliep KC, Varner MW, Smith KR, and Esplin MS
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- Adult, Alzheimer Disease mortality, Case-Control Studies, Diabetes Mellitus mortality, Eclampsia epidemiology, Female, HELLP Syndrome epidemiology, Humans, Myocardial Ischemia mortality, Pre-Eclampsia epidemiology, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Stroke mortality, Survival Analysis, Utah epidemiology, Young Adult, Cause of Death, Death Certificates, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced epidemiology
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Objective: To assess whether women with a history of hypertensive disease of pregnancy have increased risk for early adult mortality., Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, women with one or more singleton pregnancies (1939-2012) with birth certificate information in the Utah Population Database were included. Diagnoses were categorized into gestational hypertension; preeclampsia; hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelet count syndrome; and eclampsia. Women with more than one pregnancy with hypertensive disease (exposed) were included only once, assigned to the most severe category. Exposed women were matched one to two to unexposed women by age, year of childbirth, and parity at the time of the index pregnancy. The causes of death were ascertained using Utah death certificates and the fact of death was supplemented with the Social Security Death Index. Hazard ratios for cause-specific mortality among exposed women compared with unexposed women were estimated using Cox regressions adjusting for neonatal sex, parental education, preterm delivery, race-ethnicity, and maternal marital status., Results: A total of 60,580 exposed women were matched to 123,140 unexposed women; 4,520 (7.46%) exposed and 6,776 (5.50%) unexposed women had died by 2012. All-cause mortality was significantly higher among women with hypertensive disease of pregnancy (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 1.65, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.57-1.73). Exposed women's greatest excess mortality risks were from Alzheimer disease (adjusted HR 3.44, 95% CI 1.00-11.82), diabetes (adjusted HR 2.80, 95% CI 2.20-3.55), ischemic heart disease (adjusted HR 2.23, 95% CI 1.90-2.63), and stroke (adjusted HR 1.88, 95% CI 1.53-2.32)., Conclusion: Women with hypertensive disease of pregnancy have increased mortality risk, particularly for Alzheimer disease, diabetes, ischemic heart disease, and stroke.
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- 2016
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38. Carpenter-Coustan Compared With National Diabetes Data Group Criteria for Diagnosing Gestational Diabetes.
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Harper LM, Mele L, Landon MB, Carpenter MW, Ramin SM, Reddy UM, Casey B, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Sciscione A, Catalano P, Harper M, Saade G, Caritis SN, Sorokin Y, Peaceman AM, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Sensitivity and Specificity, United States, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 diagnosis, Diabetes, Gestational diagnosis, Prenatal Diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: Use of Carpenter-Coustan compared with National Diabetes Data Group criteria increases the number of women diagnosed with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) by 30-50%, but whether treatment of this milder GDM reduces adverse outcomes is unknown. We explored the effects of the diagnostic criteria used on the benefits of GDM treatment., Methods: This was a secondary analysis of a randomized trial for treatment of mild GDM diagnosed using Carpenter-Coustan criteria. We evaluated the effect of treatment within two mutually exclusive diagnostic groups: 1) women who met the stricter National Diabetes Data Group as well as Carpenter-Coustan criteria (National Diabetes Data Group), and 2) those diagnosed by Carpenter-Coustan but not meeting National Diabetes Data Group criteria (Carpenter-Coustan only). Maternal outcomes examined were pregnancy-induced hypertension, shoulder dystocia, maternal weight gain, and cesarean delivery. Neonatal outcomes were large for gestational age, macrosomia (greater than 4,000 g), fat mass, small for gestational age, and a composite outcome of perinatal death, birth injury, hypoglycemia, hyperbilirubinemia, and hyperinsulinemia. Analysis of variance or the Breslow-Day test, as appropriate, was used to test for the interaction between diagnostic criteria and GDM treatment on the outcomes of interest., Results: Of 958 patients, 560 (58.5%) met National Diabetes Data Group criteria and 398 (41.5%) met Carpenter-Coustan only. Compared with untreated women, the direction of treatment effect did not differ by diagnostic criteria used and was consistent with the original trial. The P value for interaction between diagnostic criteria and treatment status was not significant for any outcome., Conclusion: The overall beneficial treatment effect on pregnancy-induced hypertension, shoulder dystocia, cesarean delivery, and macrosomia was seen in patients diagnosed by the higher National Diabetes Data Group and by the lower thresholds of the Carpenter-Coustan criteria.
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- 2016
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39. Association of the Duration of Active Pushing With Obstetric Outcomes.
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Grobman WA, Bailit J, Lai Y, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Caritis SN, Prasad M, Tita ATN, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cesarean Section statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Parity, Pregnancy, Risk Factors, Term Birth, Young Adult, Delivery, Obstetric statistics & numerical data, Infant Health statistics & numerical data, Labor Stage, Second, Pregnancy Outcome, Time Factors
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Objective: To estimate the associations between the duration of active pushing during the second stage of labor and maternal and neonatal outcomes., Methods: We performed an observational study in which data were obtained by trained abstractors from maternal and neonatal charts of deliveries at 25 hospitals over a 3-year period. In this secondary analysis, women with no prior cesarean delivery who had a term, singleton, cephalic gestation and reached complete dilation were analyzed. The duration of pushing, defined as the time from initiation of pushing to either vaginal delivery or the decision to proceed with a cesarean delivery, was determined. The primary maternal outcome was cesarean delivery and the primary neonatal outcome was a composite that included: mechanical ventilation, proven sepsis, brachial plexus palsy, clavicular fracture, skull fracture, other fracture, seizures, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, or death. Nulliparous and parous women were analyzed separately in univariable and then multivariable analyses., Results: A total of 53,285 women were analyzed. In both nulliparous and parous women, longer duration of pushing was associated with increased odds of both cesarean delivery and the neonatal adverse outcome composite. Nevertheless, even after 4 hours of pushing, approximately 78% of nulliparous women who continued with active pushing had a vaginal delivery and more than 97% did not have the composite adverse neonatal outcome. Similarly, after more than 2 hours of pushing, approximately 82% of parous women who continued active pushing delivered vaginally and more than 97% did not have the adverse neonatal outcome., Conclusion: A longer duration of pushing is associated with an increased relative risk, but small absolute difference in risk, of neonatal complications. Approximately 78% of nulliparous women delivered vaginally even after 4 hours of pushing.
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- 2016
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40. Pregnancy-Associated Hypertension in Glucose-Intolerant Pregnancy and Subsequent Metabolic Syndrome.
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Rice MM, Landon MB, Varner MW, Casey BM, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Rouse DJ, Biggio JR Jr, Thorp JM Jr, Chien EK, Saade G, Peaceman AM, Blackwell SC, and VanDorsten JP
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- Adult, Anthropometry, Blood Pressure, Cohort Studies, Diabetes, Gestational blood, Fasting blood, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glucose Intolerance blood, Humans, Lipids blood, Pregnancy, Premature Birth blood, Risk Factors, Term Birth blood, Young Adult, Blood Glucose metabolism, Glucose Intolerance complications, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced blood, Metabolic Syndrome etiology, Pregnancy Complications blood
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether pregnancy-associated hypertension (preeclampsia or gestational hypertension) among women with varying degrees of glucose intolerance during pregnancy is associated with maternal metabolic syndrome 5-10 years later., Methods: This was an observational cohort study of women previously enrolled in a treatment trial of mild gestational diabetes mellitus or an observational study of lesser degrees of glucose intolerance evaluated 5-10 years after their index pregnancy. At follow-up, women underwent anthropometric and blood pressure measurements and analysis of fasting glucose and serum lipids., Results: A total of 825 women (47% of eligible women from the original study) were included in this analysis and evaluated at a median 7 years after their index pregnancy at a median age of 35 years. Overall, 239 (29%) had subsequent metabolic syndrome. The frequency of metabolic syndrome and its components was highest in the women who had pregnancy-associated hypertension and delivered preterm. After adjusting for confounding factors, pregnancy-associated hypertension in women who delivered preterm was associated with subsequent hypertension (130/85 mm Hg or greater; relative risk 3.06, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.95-4.80, P<.001), high triglycerides (150 mg/dL or greater; relative risk 1.82, 95% CI 1.06-3.14, P=.03), and metabolic syndrome (per the American Heart Association and National Heart Lung and Blood Institute Scientific Statement; relative risk 1.78, 95% CI 1.14-2.78, P=.01) compared with women who remained normotensive throughout their index pregnancy and were delivered at term., Conclusion: Women with varying degrees of glucose intolerance who experienced pregnancy-associated hypertension and then delivered preterm had a higher frequency of subsequent hypertension, high triglycerides, and metabolic syndrome 5-10 years later.
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- 2016
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41. Association of Cervical Effacement With the Rate of Cervical Change in Labor Among Nulliparous Women.
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Langen ES, Weiner SJ, Bloom SL, Rouse DJ, Varner MW, Reddy UM, Ramin SM, Caritis SN, Peaceman AM, Sorokin Y, Sciscione A, Carpenter MW, Mercer BM, Thorp JM Jr, Malone FD, and Iams JD
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Parity, Pregnancy, Cervix Uteri drug effects, Labor Stage, First drug effects, Labor, Induced, Oxytocics administration & dosage, Oxytocin administration & dosage
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Objective: To assess the association of cervical effacement with the rate of intrapartum cervical change among nulliparous women., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of a prospective trial of intrapartum fetal pulse oximetry. For women who had vaginal deliveries, interval-censored regression was used to estimate the time to dilate at 1-cm intervals. For each given centimeter of progressive cervical dilation, women were divided into those who had achieved 100% cervical effacement and those who had not. The analysis was performed separately for women in spontaneous labor and those who were given oxytocin., Results: A total of 3,902 women were included in this analysis, 1,466 (38%) who underwent labor induction, 1,948 (50%) who underwent labor augmentation (combined for the analysis), and 488 (13%) who labored spontaneously. For women in spontaneous labor, the time to dilate 1 cm was shorter for those who were 100% effaced starting at 4 cm of cervical dilation (P=.01 to <.001). For women who received oxytocin, the time to dilate 1 cm was shorter for those who were 100% effaced throughout labor (P<.001)., Conclusion: The rate of cervical dilation among nulliparous women is associated with not only the degree of cervical dilation, but also with cervical effacement., Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, www.clinicaltrials.gov, NCT00098709.
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- 2016
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42. Tocolysis for Women With Early Spontaneous Preterm Labor and Advanced Cervical Dilation.
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Manuck TA, Herrera CA, Korgenski EK, Jackson M, Stoddard GJ, Porter TF, and Varner MW
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Labor Stage, First, Obstetric Labor, Premature drug therapy, Tocolysis statistics & numerical data, Tocolytic Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: To characterize tocolytic use and examine perinatal outcomes among women presenting very preterm with spontaneous labor and cervical dilation 4 cm or greater., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study. Data from January 2000 to June 2011 in a single health care system were reviewed. Women with singleton, nonanomalous fetuses and preterm labor with intact membranes between 23 and 32 weeks of gestation who had cervical dilation 4 cm or greater and less than 8 cm at admission were included. Women receiving one or more tocolytics (magnesium sulfate, indomethacin, or nifedipine) were compared with those who did not receive tocolysis. The primary outcome was composite major neonatal morbidity., Results: Two hundred ninety-seven women were included; 233 (78.5%) received at least one tocolytic. Women receiving tocolysis were slightly less dilated (median 5 compared with 6 cm, P<.001) at presentation and were more likely to receive at least a partial course of corticosteroids (88.4% compared with 56.3%, P<.001). Initial composite severe neonatal morbidity rates were similar (41.6% compared with 43.8%, P=.761) regardless of tocolytic administration. Those receiving tocolysis were significantly more likely to be pregnant at least 48 hours after admission (23.6% compared with 7.8%, P=.005), but a similar proportion delivered within 7 days of admission (94.8% compared with 95.3%, P>.99), and delivery gestational ages were similar (28.9 compared with 29.2 weeks, P=.408). The incidence of chorioamnionitis and postpartum endometritis was similar between groups., Conclusion: The majority of women presenting very preterm with advanced cervical dilation received tocolysis. Although tocolysis administration increased the likelihood of achieving at least 48 hours of latency, initial neonatal outcomes were similar., Level of Evidence: II.
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- 2015
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43. Racial and ethnic disparities in maternal morbidity and obstetric care.
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Grobman WA, Bailit JL, Rice MM, Wapner RJ, Reddy UM, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Leveno KJ, Caritis SN, Iams JD, Tita ATN, Saade G, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, Tolosa JE, and VanDorsten JP
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- Adult, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Asian statistics & numerical data, Delivery, Obstetric adverse effects, Episiotomy statistics & numerical data, Female, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Humans, Lacerations etiology, Peripartum Period, Pregnancy, United States epidemiology, White People statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Health Status Disparities, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Lacerations ethnology, Perineum injuries, Postpartum Hemorrhage ethnology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious ethnology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether racial and ethnic disparities exist in obstetric care and adverse outcomes., Methods: We analyzed data from a cohort of women who delivered at 25 hospitals across the United States over a 3-year period. Race and ethnicity was categorized as non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, or Asian. Associations between race and ethnicity and severe postpartum hemorrhage, peripartum infection, and severe perineal laceration at spontaneous vaginal delivery as well as between race and ethnicity and obstetric care (eg, episiotomy) relevant to the adverse outcomes were estimated by univariable analysis and multivariable logistic regression., Results: Of 115,502 studied women, 95% were classified by one of the race and ethnicity categories. Non-Hispanic white women were significantly less likely to experience severe postpartum hemorrhage (1.6% non-Hispanic white compared with 3.0% non-Hispanic black compared with 3.1% Hispanic compared with 2.2% Asian) and peripartum infection (4.1% non-Hispanic white compared with 4.9% non-Hispanic black compared with 6.4% Hispanic compared with 6.2% Asian) than others (P<.001 for both). Severe perineal laceration at spontaneous vaginal delivery was significantly more likely in Asian women (2.5% non-Hispanic white compared with 1.2% non-Hispanic black compared with 1.5% Hispanic compared with 5.5% Asian; P<.001). These disparities persisted in multivariable analysis. Many types of obstetric care examined also were significantly different according to race and ethnicity in both univariable and multivariable analysis. There were no significant interactions between race and ethnicity and hospital of delivery., Conclusion: Racial and ethnic disparities exist for multiple adverse obstetric outcomes and types of obstetric care and do not appear to be explained by differences in patient characteristics or by delivery hospital., Level of Evidence: II.
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- 2015
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44. Morbidly adherent placenta treatments and outcomes.
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Bailit JL, Grobman WA, Rice MM, Reddy UM, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Leveno KJ, Iams JD, Tita ATN, Saade G, Rouse DJ, and Blackwell SC
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Placenta Accreta therapy, Placenta, Retained therapy, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, United States epidemiology, Placenta Accreta epidemiology, Placenta, Retained epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To describe recent maternal and neonatal delivery outcomes among women with a morbidly adherent placenta in major centers across the United States., Methods: This study reviewed a cohort of 115,502 women and their neonates born in 25 hospitals in the United States between March 2008 and February 2011 from the Assessment of Perinatal EXcellence data set. All cases of morbidly adherent placenta were identified. Maternal demographics, procedures undertaken, and maternal and neonatal outcomes were analyzed., Results: There were 158 women with a morbidly adherent placenta (1/731 births, 95% confidence interval 1/632-866). Eighteen percent of women with a morbidly adherent placenta were nulliparous and 37% had no prior cesarean delivery. Only 53% (84/158) were suspected to have a morbidly adherent placenta before delivery. Women with a prenatally suspected morbidly adherent placenta experienced large blood loss (33%), hysterectomy (92%), and intensive care unit admission (39%) compared with 19%, 45%, and 22%, respectively, in those not suspected prenatally to have a morbidly adherent placenta (P<.05 for all)., Conclusion: Eighteen percent of women with a morbidly adherent placenta were nulliparous. Half of the morbidly adherent placenta cases were suspected before delivery and outcomes were poorer in this group, probably because the more clinically significant morbidly adherent placentas are more likely to be suspected before delivery., Level of Evidence: : II.
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- 2015
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45. Laboratory abnormalities in pregnancy-associated hypertension: frequency and association with pregnancy outcomes.
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Cantu J, Clifton RG, Roberts JM, Leveno KJ, Myatt L, Reddy UM, Varner MW, Wapner RJ, Thorp JM Jr, Mercer BM, Peaceman AM, Ramin SM, Samuels P, Sciscione A, Saade G, and Sorokin Y
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- Adult, Biomarkers, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Small for Gestational Age, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Severity of Illness Index, Hypertension blood, Pre-Eclampsia blood, Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular blood
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the frequency of abnormal laboratory test results in pregnancy-associated hypertension and the relationship with pregnancy outcomes., Methods: This was a secondary analysis of a multicenter trial of vitamin C and E for prevention of pregnancy-associated hypertension in low-risk nulliparous women. Laboratory abnormalities included: platelets less than 100,000/mm, aspartate aminotransferase 100 units/L or greater, creatinine 1.5 mg/dL or greater, lactate dehydrogenase 600 units/L or greater, total bilirubin 1.2 mg/dL or greater, or evidence of hemolysis on peripheral smear. Mild pregnancy-associated hypertension was defined as blood pressure 140-159/90-109 mm Hg. Severe pregnancy-associated hypertension was defined as persistent blood pressure 160/110 mm Hg or greater, acute antihypertensive treatment, or any blood pressure elevation associated with clinical signs of end-organ dysfunction (one or more of headache, epigastric pain, blurred vision, pulmonary edema, eclampsia, or oliguria). Pregnancy outcomes were compared across four groups: I, mild hypertension alone; II, mild hypertension+abnormal laboratory values; III, severe pregnancy-associated hypertension alone; and IV, severe pregnancy-associated hypertension+abnormal laboratory values., Results: Of 9,969 women, 2,752 (27.9%) developed pregnancy-associated hypertension and of these, laboratory abnormalities occurred in 7.3%. Laboratory abnormalities increased with severity of hypertension: mild hypertension alone (4.9%), severe hypertension alone (8.9%), and mild or severe hypertension with clinical signs of end-organ dysfunction (12.2%) (P for trend<.001). Compared with women with mild hypertension alone, the adjusted odds for the perinatal composite (2-fold to 4.8-fold in Category III-IV), preterm birth (2.1-fold to 7.8-fold in Category II-IV), and other adverse perinatal outcomes increase with disease severity, particularly with laboratory abnormalities and severe clinical signs., Conclusion: The frequency of abnormal laboratory values in women with pregnancy-associated hypertension increases with disease severity. Adverse perinatal outcomes increase in the presence of abnormal laboratory values, particularly in those with clinical signs, likely atttributable in part to the decision to deliver early.
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- 2014
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46. Frequency of and factors associated with severe maternal morbidity.
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Grobman WA, Bailit JL, Rice MM, Wapner RJ, Reddy UM, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Leveno KJ, Caritis SN, Iams JD, Tita AT, Saade G, Sorokin Y, Rouse DJ, Blackwell SC, Tolosa JE, and Van Dorsten JP
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced epidemiology, Maternal Mortality, Multivariate Analysis, Odds Ratio, Pregnancy, ROC Curve, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Postpartum Hemorrhage epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the frequency of severe maternal morbidity, assess its underlying etiologies, and develop a scoring system to predict its occurrence.Supplemental Digital Content is Available in the Text., Methods: This was a secondary analysis of a Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units Network cohort of 115,502 women and their neonates born in 25 hospitals across the United States over a 3-year period. Women were classified as having severe maternal morbidity according to a scoring system that takes into account the occurrence of red blood cell transfusion (more than three units), intubation, unanticipated surgical intervention, organ failure, and intensive care unit admission. The frequency of severe maternal morbidity was calculated and the underlying etiologies determined. Multivariable analysis identified patient factors present on admission that were independently associated with severe maternal morbidity; these were used to develop a prediction model for severe maternal morbidity., Results: Among 115,502 women who delivered during the study period, 332 (2.9/1,000 births, 95% confidence interval 2.6-3.2) experienced severe maternal morbidity. Postpartum hemorrhage was responsible for approximately half of severe maternal morbidity. Multiple patient factors were found to be independently associated with severe maternal morbidity and were used to develop a predictive model with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.80., Conclusion: Severe maternal morbidity occurs in approximately 2.9 per 1,000 births, is most commonly the result of postpartum hemorrhage, and occurs more commonly in association with several identifiable patient characteristics., Level of Evidence: : II.
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- 2014
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47. Placental findings in singleton stillbirths.
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Pinar H, Goldenberg RL, Koch MA, Heim-Hall J, Hawkins HK, Shehata B, Abramowsky C, Parker CB, Dudley DJ, Silver RM, Stoll B, Carpenter M, Saade G, Moore J, Conway D, Varner MW, Hogue CJR, Coustan DR, Sbrana E, Thorsten V, Willinger M, and Reddy UM
- Subjects
- Adult, Chorioamnionitis pathology, Chorionic Villi pathology, Female, Fetal Death pathology, Gestational Age, Humans, Live Birth, Placenta abnormalities, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications pathology, Single Umbilical Artery pathology, Placenta pathology, Placenta Diseases pathology, Stillbirth
- Abstract
Objective: To compare placental lesions for stillbirth cases and live birth controls in a population-based study., Methods: Pathologic examinations were performed on placentas from singleton pregnancies using a standard protocol. Data were analyzed overall and within gestational age groups at delivery., Results: Placentas from 518 stillbirths and 1,200 live births were studied. Single umbilical artery was present in 7.7% of stillbirths and 1.7% of live births, velamentous cord insertion was present in 5% of stillbirths and 1.1% of live births, diffuse terminal villous immaturity was present in 10.3% of stillbirths and 2.3% of live births, inflammation (eg, acute chorioamnionitis of placental membranes) was present in 30.4% of stillbirths and 12% of live births, vascular degenerative changes in chorionic plate were present in 55.7% of stillbirths and 0.5% of live births, retroplacental hematoma was present in 23.8% of stillbirths and 4.2% of live births, intraparenchymal thrombi was present in 19.7% of stillbirths and 13.3% of live births, parenchymal infarction was present in 10.9% of stillbirths and 4.4% of live births, fibrin deposition was present in 9.2% of stillbirths and 1.5% of live births, fetal vascular thrombi was present in 23% of stillbirths and 7% of live births, avascular villi was present in 7.6% of stillbirths and 2.0% of live births, and hydrops was present in 6.4% of stillbirths and 1.0% of live births. Among stillbirths, inflammation and retroplacental hematoma were more common in placentas from early deliveries, whereas thrombotic lesions were more common in later gestation. Inflammatory lesions were especially common in early live births., Conclusions: Placental lesions were highly associated with stillbirth compared with live births. All lesions associated with stillbirth were found in live births but often with variations by gestational age at delivery. Knowledge of lesion prevalence within gestational age groups in both stillbirths and live birth controls contributes to an understanding of the association between placental abnormality and stillbirth., Level of Evidence: II.
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- 2014
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48. Association between stillbirth and illicit drug use and smoking during pregnancy.
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Varner MW, Silver RM, Rowland Hogue CJ, Willinger M, Parker CB, Thorsten VR, Goldenberg RL, Saade GR, Dudley DJ, Coustan D, Stoll B, Bukowski R, Koch MA, Conway D, Pinar H, and Reddy UM
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- Adult, Cannabis adverse effects, Case-Control Studies, Cotinine blood, Female, Fetal Blood chemistry, Fetal Death epidemiology, Humans, Pregnancy, Substance Abuse Detection, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Fetal Death etiology, Narcotics adverse effects, Smoking adverse effects, Stillbirth epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders complications
- Abstract
Objective: To compare illicit drug and smoking use in pregnancies with and without stillbirth., Methods: The Stillbirth Collaborative Research Network conducted a case-control study from March 2006 to September 2008, covering more than 90% of deliveries to residents of five a priori-defined geographically diverse regions. The study attempted to include all stillbirths and representative liveborn controls. Umbilical cord samples from cases and controls were collected and frozen for subsequent batch analysis. Maternal serum was collected at delivery and batch analyzed for cotinine., Results: For 663 stillbirth deliveries, 418 (63%) had cord homogenate and 579 (87%) had maternal cotinine assays performed. For 1,932 live birth deliveries, 1,050 (54%) had cord homogenate toxicology and 1,545 (80%) had maternal cotinine assays performed. A positive cord homogenate test for any illicit drug was associated with stillbirth (odds ratio [OR] 1.94, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.16-3.27). The most common individual drug was cannabis (OR 2.34 95% CI 1.13-4.81), although the effect was partially confounded by smoking. Both maternal self-reported smoking history and maternal serum cotinine levels were associated in a dose-response relationship with stillbirth. Positive serum cotinine less than 3 ng/mL and no reported history of smoking (proxy for passive smoke exposure) also were associated with stillbirth (OR 2.06, 95% CI 1.24-3.41)., Conclusion: Cannabis use, smoking, illicit drug use, and apparent exposure to second-hand smoke, separately or in combination, during pregnancy were associated with an increased risk of stillbirth. Because cannabis use may be increasing with increased legalization, the relevance of these findings may increase as well., Level of Evidence: II.
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- 2014
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49. Maternal 25-hydroxyvitamin d and preterm birth in twin gestations.
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Bodnar LM, Rouse DJ, Momirova V, Peaceman AM, Sciscione A, Spong CY, Varner MW, Malone FD, Iams JD, Mercer BM, Thorp JM Jr, Sorokin Y, Carpenter MW, Lo J, Ramin SM, and Harper M
- Subjects
- Adult, Cohort Studies, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, Second, Premature Birth epidemiology, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, United States, Vitamin D blood, Young Adult, Pregnancy, Twin blood, Premature Birth blood, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives, Vitamin D Deficiency blood
- Abstract
Objective: To assess whether there was an independent association between maternal 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations at 24-28 weeks of gestation and preterm birth in a multicenter U.S. cohort of twin pregnancies., Methods: Serum samples from women who participated in a clinical trial of 17 α-hydroxyprogesterone caproate for the prevention of preterm birth in twin gestations (2004-2006) were assayed for 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (n=211). Gestational age was determined early in pregnancy using a rigorous algorithm. Preterm birth was defined as delivery of the first twin or death of either twin at less than 35 weeks of gestation., Results: The mean serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration was 82.7 nmol/L (standard deviation 31.5); 40.3% of women had concentrations less than 75 nmol/L. Preterm birth at less than 35 weeks of gestation occurred in 49.4% of women with 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations less than 75 nmol/L compared with 26.2% among those with concentrations of 75 nmol/L or more (P<.001). After adjustment for maternal race and ethnicity, study site, parity, prepregnancy body mass index, season, marital status, education, gestational age at blood sampling, smoking status, and 17 α-hydroxyprogesterone caproate treatment, maternal 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration of 75 nmol/L or more was associated with a 60% reduction in the odds of preterm birth compared with concentrations less than 75 nmol/L (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.2-0.8). A similar protective association was observed when studying preterm birth at less than 32 weeks of gestation (OR 0.2, 95% CI 0.1-0.6) and after confounder adjustment., Conclusions: Late second-trimester maternal 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations less than 75 nmol/L are associated with an increase in the risk of preterm birth in this cohort of twin pregnancies., Level of Evidence: II.
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- 2013
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50. Relationship between 1-hour glucose challenge test results and perinatal outcomes.
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Figueroa D, Landon MB, Mele L, Spong CY, Ramin SM, Casey B, Wapner RJ, Varner MW, Thorp JM Jr, Sciscione A, Catalano P, Harper M, Saade G, Caritis SN, Sorokin Y, Peaceman AM, and Tolosa JE
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Diabetes, Gestational epidemiology, Female, Glucose Tolerance Test, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Diabetes, Gestational diagnosis, Infant, Newborn, Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the relationship between 1-hour 50 g glucose challenge test values and perinatal outcomes., Methods: This was a secondary analysis of data from a multicenter treatment trial of mild gestational diabetes mellitus. Women with glucose challenge test values of 135-199 mg/dL completed a 3-hour oral glucose tolerance test. Mild gestational diabetes mellitus was defined as fasting glucose less than 95 mg/dL and two or more abnormal oral glucose tolerance test values: 1-hour 180 mg/dL or more; 2-hour 155 mg/dL or more; and 3-hour 140 mg/dL or more. Our study included untreated women with glucose challenge test values of 135-139 mg/dL and 140-199 mg/dL and a comparison group with values less than 120 mg/dL. Primary outcomes included a perinatal composite (stillbirth, neonatal death, hypoglycemia, hyperbilirubinemia, neonatal hyperinsulinemia, and birth trauma), large for gestational age (LGA, birth weight above the 90 percentile based on sex-specific and race-specific norms), and macrosomia (greater than 4,000 g)., Results: There were 436 women with glucose challenge test values less than 120 mg/dL and 1,403 with values of 135 mg/dL or more (135-139, n=135; 140-199, n=1,268). The composite perinatal outcome occurred in 25.6% of those with glucose challenge test values less than 120 mg/dL compared with 21.1% for values of 135-139 mg/dL and 35.3% for values of 140-199 mg/dL. Rates of LGA by group were 6.6%, 6.8%, and 12.4%, respectively. Rates of macrosomia by group were 7.8%, 6.1%, and 12.1%, respectively. Compared with glucose challenge test values less than 120 mg/dL, the adjusted odds ratios (ORs) (95% confidence intervals [CIs]) for values of 140-199 mg/dL were 1.48 (1.14-1.93) for the composite outcome, 1.97 (1.29-3.11) for LGA, and 1.61 (1.07-2.49) for macrosomia. For glucose challenge test values of 135-139 mg/dL, adjusted ORs and 95% CIs were 0.75 (0.45-1.21), 1.04 (0.44-2.24), and 0.75 (0.30-1.66), respectively. The subcategories with glucose challenge test values of 140-144 mg/dL and 145-149 mg/dL also were associated with an increase in selected outcomes when compared with those with values less than 120 mg/dL., Conclusions: Glucose challenge test values of 135-139 mg/dL were not associated with adverse outcomes compared with values less than 120 mg/dL; however, glucose challenge test values of 140 mg/dL or more were associated with an increase in odds of the composite perinatal outcome, LGA, and macrosomia.
- Published
- 2013
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