COVID-19 作为妊娠高血压疾病的风险因素:回顾性队列研究

Hannah Childs, Cayman Bickerstaff, Teodora Stoikov, Hongyan Xu, Katherine Marino, Cynthia Li, Lina Nguyen, Bailey Rodgers, Jennifer T. Allen
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摘要

本研究旨在评估孕期感染冠状病毒病2019(COVID-19)是否是妊娠期高血压疾病的危险因素。本研究对2020年3月至2021年12月期间在一家城市学术转诊中心分娩的产科患者进行了回顾性评估。该研究对 2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 12 月期间在城市学术转诊中心分娩的产科患者进行了回顾性评估,并将患者分为 COVID-19 阳性和 COVID-19 阴性两类。主要结果是妊娠高血压疾病的发生。χ2检验、费雪精确检验、学生双样本检验和多重逻辑回归用于评估COVID-19状态与结果之间的关联。在2760份审查病历中,有2426份(87.9%)符合纳入标准。在 2426 名患者中,COVID 阳性的有 203 人,COVID 阴性的有 2223 人。两组之间没有明显的人口统计学差异。在对混杂效应进行调整后,COVID-19 被确定为合并妊娠高血压疾病(比值比 [OR] 1.93,95% 置信区间 [CI]:1.39-2.66)和子痫前期(比值比 2.01,95% 置信区间 [CI]:1.38-2.88)的风险因素。在单变量分析中,孕期感染 COVID-19 与剖宫产风险增加呈弱相关(p = 0.046),但在多变量分析中却没有相关性,而在多变量分析前后,孕期感染 COVID-19 与孕产妇入住 ICU(p = 0.003)和住院时间延长(p < 0.001)的风险增加均有相关性。本研究表明,妊娠期感染 COVID-19 是导致子痫前期的危险因素,但本研究无法对妊娠期溶血、肝酶升高和血小板计数低等更严重的高血压情况和子痫得出结论。COVID-19被确定为住院时间延长和产妇入住重症监护室的风险因素,但在多变量分析中,COVID-19与剖腹产之间没有显著相关性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
COVID‐19 as a risk factor for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy: A retrospective cohort study
The aim of this study was to assess whether coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) infection during pregnancy is a risk factor for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.A retrospective evaluation was conducted on obstetric patients who gave birth between March 2020 and December 2021 at an academic urban referral center. The patients were categorized as COVID‐19‐positive or COVID‐19‐negative during pregnancy. The primary outcome was the development of a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy. Secondary outcomes included preterm delivery, mode of delivery, maternal death, maternal intensive care unit (ICU) admission, neonatal ICU admission, intrauterine fetal demise/stillbirth, fetal growth restriction and prolonged hospital stay. χ2 tests, Fisher's exact tests, Student's two‐sample tests and multiple logistic regressions were used to evaluate the association between COVID‐19 status and outcomes.Of 2760 reviewed charts, 2426 (87.9%) met the inclusion criteria. Of 2426 patients, 203 were COVID‐positive and 2223 were COVID‐negative. There were no significant demographic differences between the two groups. After adjusting for confounding effects, COVID‐19 was determined to be a risk factor for combined hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (odds ratio [OR] 1.93, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.39–2.66) and pre‐eclampsia specifically (OR 2.01, 95% CI 1.38–2.88). COVID‐19 infection during pregnancy was weakly associated with an increased risk of caesarean delivery (p = 0.046) on univariate analysis but not on multivariate analysis, whereas it was associated with an increased risk of maternal ICU admission (p = 0.003), and prolonged hospital stay (p < 0.001) both before and after multivariate analysis.This study suggests that COVID‐19 infection during pregnancy is a risk factor for pre‐eclampsia. The study was unable to draw conclusions about more severe hypertensive conditions of pregnancy hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes and low platelet count; Eclampsia. COVID‐19 was determined to be a risk factor for prolonged hospital stay and maternal ICU admission, but there was no significant correlation between COVID‐19 and caesarean delivery on multivariate analysis.
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