COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/Infection

Objective: The objective of this study is to determine the association between COVID-19 infection and pregnancy outcomes at our institution when universal testing was implemented for all patients admitted to Labor & Delivery. Methods: This was an IRB-exempt, retrospective chart review of all obs...

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Main Authors: Phuong Nguyen, Dina El-Kady, Jonathan Rosner, Salma Rahimi, Cheryl Dinglas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Levy Library Press 2021-05-01
Series:Journal of Scientific Innovation in Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalofscientificinnovationinmedicine.org/articles/113
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spelling doaj-94c5dd6b64594e9fbd9e4782055a714b2021-06-10T08:07:31ZengLevy Library PressJournal of Scientific Innovation in Medicine2579-01532021-05-014210.29024/jsim.11395COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/InfectionPhuong Nguyen0Dina El-Kady1Jonathan Rosner2Salma Rahimi3Cheryl Dinglas4Mt Sinai South NassauMt Sinai South NassauMt Sinai South NassauMt Sinai South NassauMt Sinai South NassauObjective: The objective of this study is to determine the association between COVID-19 infection and pregnancy outcomes at our institution when universal testing was implemented for all patients admitted to Labor & Delivery. Methods: This was an IRB-exempt, retrospective chart review of all obstetrical patients admitted and evaluated in L&D from March 30th to April 30th. COVID-19 testing was performed on all patients who were admitted and their support person, irrespective of the presence of symptoms. Data analysis was performed with baseline demographics compared. Continuous variables were compared via T-test and categorical values using Chi-square and Fisher exact. Significant values are those considered with p < .05. Results: There were no differences in delivery outcomes between the two groups with regards to mode of delivery, preterm labor, premature rupture of membranes, preeclampsia, placental abruption, or fetal demise. However, there was an increase in intrauterine infection/inflammation among COVID positive patients (8.8% compare to 1.4%, p < .05) ('Tables 1' and '2'). Conclusions: COVID positive patients were noted to have an increase in intrauterine infection/inflammation. Current published data demonstrates that SARS-Cov-2 infection during 3rd trimester of pregnancy is not associated with vertical transmission. “However, the possibility of viral load influencing the transmission risk should be of concern. Published studies have demonstrated a positive relationship between the viral load of some viruses and their ability to spread from mother to child” [1]. Given our findings, the possibility of SARS-CoV-2 infection resulting in intrauterine infection/inflammation should be further evaluated as the pandemic continues.https://journalofscientificinnovationinmedicine.org/articles/113covid-19pregnancyintrauterine infection and inflammation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Phuong Nguyen
Dina El-Kady
Jonathan Rosner
Salma Rahimi
Cheryl Dinglas
spellingShingle Phuong Nguyen
Dina El-Kady
Jonathan Rosner
Salma Rahimi
Cheryl Dinglas
COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/Infection
Journal of Scientific Innovation in Medicine
covid-19
pregnancy
intrauterine infection and inflammation
author_facet Phuong Nguyen
Dina El-Kady
Jonathan Rosner
Salma Rahimi
Cheryl Dinglas
author_sort Phuong Nguyen
title COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/Infection
title_short COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/Infection
title_full COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/Infection
title_fullStr COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/Infection
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19 and Pregnancy Outcomes: An Increased Risk of Intrauterine Inflammation/Infection
title_sort covid-19 and pregnancy outcomes: an increased risk of intrauterine inflammation/infection
publisher Levy Library Press
series Journal of Scientific Innovation in Medicine
issn 2579-0153
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Objective: The objective of this study is to determine the association between COVID-19 infection and pregnancy outcomes at our institution when universal testing was implemented for all patients admitted to Labor & Delivery. Methods: This was an IRB-exempt, retrospective chart review of all obstetrical patients admitted and evaluated in L&D from March 30th to April 30th. COVID-19 testing was performed on all patients who were admitted and their support person, irrespective of the presence of symptoms. Data analysis was performed with baseline demographics compared. Continuous variables were compared via T-test and categorical values using Chi-square and Fisher exact. Significant values are those considered with p < .05. Results: There were no differences in delivery outcomes between the two groups with regards to mode of delivery, preterm labor, premature rupture of membranes, preeclampsia, placental abruption, or fetal demise. However, there was an increase in intrauterine infection/inflammation among COVID positive patients (8.8% compare to 1.4%, p < .05) ('Tables 1' and '2'). Conclusions: COVID positive patients were noted to have an increase in intrauterine infection/inflammation. Current published data demonstrates that SARS-Cov-2 infection during 3rd trimester of pregnancy is not associated with vertical transmission. “However, the possibility of viral load influencing the transmission risk should be of concern. Published studies have demonstrated a positive relationship between the viral load of some viruses and their ability to spread from mother to child” [1]. Given our findings, the possibility of SARS-CoV-2 infection resulting in intrauterine infection/inflammation should be further evaluated as the pandemic continues.
topic covid-19
pregnancy
intrauterine infection and inflammation
url https://journalofscientificinnovationinmedicine.org/articles/113
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