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Maternal, fetal, and placental conditions associated with medically indicated late preterm and early term delivery: a retrospective study
Author(s) -
Brown HK,
Speechley KN,
Macnab J,
Natale R,
Campbell MK
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
bjog: an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.157
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1471-0528
pISSN - 1470-0328
DOI - 10.1111/1471-0528.13428
Subject(s) - medicine , gestation , odds ratio , confounding , pregnancy , obstetrics , fetus , gestational age , retrospective cohort study , preterm delivery , full term , pediatrics , odds , logistic regression , biology , genetics
Objective Our objectives were: (1) to examine the association between maternal, fetal, and placental phenotypes of preterm delivery and medically indicated early delivery of singletons during the late preterm and early term periods; and (2) to identify the specific maternal, fetal, and placental conditions associated with these early deliveries. Design Retrospective study. Setting City of London and Middlesex County, Ontario, Canada. Sample Singleton live deliveries, at 34–41 weeks of gestation to women in London and Middlesex. Methods We obtained data from a city‐wide perinatal database (2002–2011; n  = 25 699). We used multinomial logistic regression for multivariable analyses. Main outcome measure The outcome was the occurrence of medically indicated late preterm (34–36 weeks of gestation) and early term (37–38 weeks of gestation) delivery, versus delivery at full term (39–41 weeks of gestation). Results After controlling for confounding factors, all phenotypes were associated with increased odds of medically indicated late preterm and early term delivery. Within the maternal phenotype, chronic maternal medical conditions were associated with increased odds of medically indicated early term delivery (e.g. for gastrointestinal disease, adjusted odds ratio, aOR  1.72, 95%  CI 1.47–2.00; for anaemia, aOR  1.40, 95%  CI 1.20–1.63), but not late preterm delivery. Conclusions The aetiology of medically indicated early delivery close to full term is heterogeneous. Patterns of associations suggest slightly different conditions underlying the late preterm and early term phenotypes, with chronic maternal medical conditions being associated with early term delivery but not with late preterm delivery. These results have implications for the prevention of early delivery as well as the identification of high‐risk groups among those born early. Tweetable Abstract The aetiology of medically indicated late preterm and early term delivery is heterogeneous.

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