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Pregnancy and neonatal outcomes of COVID-19: The PAN-COVID study

Authors :
E. Mullins
A. Perry
J. Banerjee
J. Townson
D. Grozeva
R. Milton
N. Kirby
R. Playle
T. Bourne
C. Lees
Abby Rand
Aethele Khunda
Aleš Roztočil
Alexandra J Kermack
Ami Mackay
Amit Verma
Amna Ahmed
Amy Mahdi
Anam Fayadh
Andrea Dall'Asta
Andrea Harrington
Angeliki Gerede
Avideah Nejad
Barkha Sinha
Beth Peers
Bev Hammond
Bini Ajay
Caroline Dixon
Caroline Everden
Carrie Heal
Catherine Bressington
Cheryl Wyatt
Chris Flood
Christine Möller-Christensen
Clare O'Brien
Coralie Glenn-Sansum
Coralie Huson
Dimitrios Rallis
Donna Perkins
Donna Southam
Donna Wixted
Alexandra Viner
Anila Asghar
Antony Nicoll
Caroline Knight
Gillian McKeown
Hema Divakar
Plastiras Panagiotis Christofidis
Prakash Satodia
Rachel Liebling
Rita Arya
Rukhsana Kousar
Ruta Gada
Sankara Narayanan
Stamatina Iliodromiti
Vibha Giri
Vimal Vasu
Wassim Hassan
Zoe Woodward
E. Mutema
Eleanor MK Jarvie
Elena Romero
Emma Collins
Emma Meadows
Emma Mills
Emma Tanton
Enxhi Vrapi
Ernawati Darmawan
Fabio Barra
Federico Prefumo
Fidelma Lee
Hayley L. Martin
Helen Gbinigie
Helen Millward
Hilary Owen
Isobel Crawford
Jacqueline Tipper
Jacqui Jennings
Jamie-Louise Raven
Jane Cantliffe
Jane Radford
Janet Cresswell
Jennifer Syson
Jessie Brain
Joanna Mead
Jude Mossop
Julie Goddard
Julie Grindey
Karen Cloherty
Karen Watkins
Kate Robinson
Katie Barker
Kerry Elliott
Kim Hinshaw
Kirsty Revell
Laura Camarasa
Laura Harris
Laurie Windsor
Leanne Sherris
Lianne Chapman
Linda Bishop
Liona Chiu Yee POON
Lisa Frankland
Liz Glyn-Jones
Louise Emmet
Louise Swaminathan
M.I Aldika Akbar
Maggie Armstrong
Mahalakshmi Gorti
Mairead Black
Mani Malarselvi
Manjiri Khare
Mark Chester
Martina Andrasova
Maryanne Bray
Mauro Parra-Cordero
MD Roland Berger
Michelle Anderson
Millicent Anim-Somuah
Mingxing XIE
Miriam Bourke
Mohamed Elbahnasawy
Mohamed Sobhy Bakry
Ahmar Shah
BA RATHER
David Churchill
Ling Wee
Salman Kidwai
Trevor Balling
Allison Amin
Sandra Essien
Ms Sameena Kausar
Ms.Jyothi Rajeswary
Muglu Javaid
Narendra Aladangady
Neil Shah
Nichola Bale
Nicky Mason
Pensée Wu
Lavinia Margarit
Rabia Zill-e-Huma
Rachel Newport
Robin Hughes
Roobin Jokhi
Roshni Mansfield
Ru Davies
Ruth Davies
Sam Ratcliffe
Sandra Greer
Sarah Coxon
Sarah Ekladios
Sarah Stables
Shanteela McCooty
Sharon Gowans
Sharon Jones
Shazia Jaleel
Shelly Higgins
Sherry Halawa
Siân C Harrington
Sophie Robinson
Soum Nallapeta
Stephanie Grigsby
Susara Blunden
SSA Tiziana Frusca
Veerareddy Sukrutha
Vicki Atkinson
Victoria Murtha
Waldo Germán Caro
Zoe Garner
Medical Research Council (MRC)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess perinatal outcomes for pregnancies affected by suspected or confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. METHODS: Prospective, web-based registry. Pregnant women were invited to participate if they had suspected or confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection between 1st January 2020 and 31st March 2021 to assess the impact of infection on maternal and perinatal outcomes including miscarriage, stillbirth, fetal growth restriction, pre-term birth and transmission to the infant. RESULTS: Between April 2020 and March 2021, the study recruited 8239 participants who had suspected or confirmed SARs-CoV-2 infection episodes in pregnancy between January 2020 and March 2021. Maternal death affected 14/8197 (0.2%) participants, 176/8187 (2.2%) of participants required ventilatory support. Pre-eclampsia affected 389/8189 (4.8%) participants, eclampsia was reported in 40/ 8024 (0.5%) of all participants. Stillbirth affected 35/8187 (0.4 %) participants. In participants delivering within 2 weeks of delivery 21/2686 (0.8 %) were affected by stillbirth compared with 8/4596 (0.2 %) delivering ≥ 2 weeks after infection (95 % CI 0.3-1.0). SGA affected 744/7696 (9.3 %) of livebirths, FGR affected 360/8175 (4.4 %) of all pregnancies. Pre-term birth occurred in 922/8066 (11.5%), the majority of these were indicated pre-term births, 220/7987 (2.8%) participants experienced spontaneous pre-term births. Early neonatal deaths affected 11/8050 livebirths. Of all neonates, 80/7993 (1.0%) tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. CONCLUSIONS: Infection was associated with indicated pre-term birth, most commonly for fetal compromise. The overall proportions of women affected by SGA and FGR were not higher than expected, however there was the proportion affected by stillbirth in participants delivering within 2 weeks of infection was significantly higher than those delivering ≥ 2 weeks after infection. We suggest that clinicians' threshold for delivery should be low if there are concerns with fetal movements or fetal heart rate monitoring in the time around infection. The proportion affected by pre-eclampsia amongst participants was not higher than would be expected, although we report a higher than expected proportion affected by eclampsia. There appears to be no effect on birthweight or congenital malformations in women affected by SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnancy and neonatal infection is uncommon. This study reflects a population with a range of infection severity for SARS-COV-2 in pregnancy, generalisable to whole obstetric populations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03012115
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....db479e8a1755a18f480b777fcd20d897