COVID-19 infection raises risk of severe complications during pregnancy

A study of 2,100 pregnant people from 18 countries worldwide has found that infection with the SARS-CoV-2 virus significantly raises the risk of severe complications during pregnancy and birth.

One of the first major studies into the impact of COVID-19 on birth outcomes has found that pregnant people who are infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus face significantly higher risk of severe maternal and newborn complications compared to those without the virus.

Led by researchers at Oxford University, the study gathered data from 2,100 pregnant people from 43 maternity hospitals in 18 low-, middle- and high-income countries worldwide. To determine the risk posed by COVID-19, each person affected by the virus was compared to two non-infected pregnant people giving birth at the same time in the same hospital.

Robert Gunier, an assistant researcher at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health, and Stephen Rauch, a data analyst at Berkeley Public Health, led the statistical analysis for the project.

“It is important to understand the impact of COVID-19 on pregnant people and neonates to inform clinicians of the risks and to reduce vaccine hesitancy among pregnant people,” Gunier said. “We found that symptomatic COVID-19 infection was associated with substantial increases in maternal and neonatal complications and morbidity, suggesting that clinicians should implement COVID-19 preventive measures with pregnant people.”

The study found that people who were infected with COVID-19 during pregnancy were at increased risk of premature birth, pre-eclampsia, infections, admission to intensive care and even death. While the number of maternal deaths remained low overall, the risk of dying during pregnancy and in the postnatal period was 22 times higher in people with COVID-19 than in non-infected pregnant people.

Babies born to people infected with COVID-19 were also more likely to develop complications, such as conditions requiring admission to Neonatal Intensive Care Units. However, only 12.9% of infants born to people with COVID-19 tested positive for the virus after birth, and breastfeeding did not seem to increase the risk of transmitting the virus to the newborn.

“Luckily, we found that COVID-19 positive people who were asymptomatic had mostly similar outcomes to people that were COVID-19 negative,” Gunier said.

The findings highlight the need to prioritize the health of pregnant people when developing public health measures, the researchers say.

“We now know that the risks to mothers and babies are greater than we assumed at the start of the pandemic and that known health measures when implemented must include pregnant women,” said Stephen Kennedy, a professor of reproductive medicine at the University of Oxford, who co-led the study. “The information should help families, as the need to do all one can to avoid becoming infected is now clear. It also strengthens the case for offering vaccination to pregnant women.”

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