Maternal and infant morbidity following birth before 27 weeks of gestation: a single centre study
- PMID: 33431902
- PMCID: PMC7801674
- DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-79445-1
Maternal and infant morbidity following birth before 27 weeks of gestation: a single centre study
Abstract
Delivery at extreme preterm gestational ages (GA) [Formula: see text] weeks is challenging with limited evidence often focused only on neonatal outcomes. We reviewed management and short term maternal, fetal and neonatal outcomes of births for 132 women (22 + 0 to 26 + 6 weeks' GA) with a live fetus at admission to hospital and in labour or at planned emergency Caesarean section: 103 singleton and 29 (53 live fetuses) twin gestations. Thirty women (23%) had pre-existing medical problems, 110 (83%) had antenatal complications; only 17 (13%) women experienced neither. Major maternal labour and delivery complications affected 35 women (27%). 151 fetuses (97%) were exposed to antenatal steroids, 24 (15%) to tocolysis and 70 (45%) to magnesium sulphate. Delivery complications affected 11 fetuses, with 12 labour or delivery room deaths; survival to discharge was 75% (117/156), increasing with GA: 25% (1/4), 75% (18/24), 69% (29/42), 73% (33/45) and 88% (36/41) at 22, 23, 24, 25 and 26 weeks GA respectively (p = 0.024). No statistically important impact was seen from twin status, maternal illness or obstetric management. Even in a specialist perinatal unit antenatal and postnatal maternal complications are common in extreme preterm births, emphasising the need to include maternal as well as neonatal outcomes.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no competing interests.
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References
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- Soe A, David ALM, Roberts AD, Costeloe K. Perinatal Management of Pregnant Women at the Threshold of Infant Viability (the Obstetric Perspective) London: Tech. Rep, Royal College of Obstetricans and Gynaecologists; 2014.
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