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Malaria in the First Trimester of Pregnancy and Fetal Growth: Results from a Beninese Preconceptional Cohort

Authors :
Babagnidé François Koladjo
Emmanuel Yovo
Manfred Accrombessi
Gino Agbota
William Atade
Olaiitan T Ladikpo
Murielle Mehoba
Auguste Degbe
Nikki Jackson
Achille Massougbodji
Darius Sossou
Bertin Vianou
Michel Cot
Gilles Cottrell
Nadine Fievet
Jennifer Zeitlin
Valérie Briand
Source :
The Journal of infectious diseases. 225(10)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Malaria in early pregnancy occurs at a time when the placenta is developing, with possible consequences for placental function and fetal growth. We assessed the association between first trimester malaria and fetal growth documented through repeated ultrasound scans. Methods The RECIPAL preconceptional cohort included 411 Beninese pregnant women followed from 7 weeks’ gestation (wg) until delivery. Among them, 218 had 4 scans for fetal monitoring at 16, 22, 28, and 34 wg. Multivariate seemingly unrelated regression models were used to assess association of microscopic malaria in the first trimester ( Results Of 39% (86/218) of women with at least 1 microscopic malarial infection during pregnancy, 52.3% (45/86) were infected in the first trimester. Most women (88.5%) were multiparous. There was no association between adjusted z-scores for fetal growth parameters and first trimester malaria. Parity, newborn sex, socioeconomic level, and maternal body mass index significantly influenced fetal growth. Conclusions In a context where malaria infections in pregnancy are well detected and treated, their adverse effect on fetal growth may be limited. Our results argue in favor of preventing and treating infections as early as the first trimester.

Details

ISSN :
15376613 and 00221899
Volume :
225
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8c6d64ed480c53e5e6fda6ed5b03784b