Chlamydia and gonorrhoea infections linked to pregnancy complications
Becoming infected with Chlamydia Treatment
or gonorrhoea in the lead-up to, or during, pregnancy, increases the
risk of complications, such as stillbirth or unplanned premature birth,
indicates research published online in the journal Sexually Transmitted
Infections.
The researchers analysed the birth records of more
than 350,000 women who had had their first baby between 1999 and 2008 in
New South Wales, Australia's most heavily populated state.
The
researchers wanted to find out if infection with either chlamydia or
gonorrhoea in the lead-up to, or during, pregnancy, had any impact on
the baby or the birth itself, as there is continuing debate about
whether these infections can increase the risk of complications.
The women's birth records were linked back to state records about notifiable conditions, such as Chlamydia Cure and gonorrhoea.
Among
the 354,217 women who had had their first child between 1999 and 2008,
3658 (1%) had had at least one notifiable chlamydia infection before the
birth. And most (81%) of these had been diagnosed before the estimated
date of conception.
Just 196 (0.6%) had been diagnosed with
gonorrhoea before the birth, with most diagnoses (just under 85%) made
before the estimated conception date.
Half of those diagnosed with gonorrhoea had also previously been infected with chlamydia.
In
all, 4% of the women had an unplanned premature birth; 12% had babies
who were small for dates; and 0.6% (2234) of the babies were stillborn.
Factors
such as age, social disadvantage, smoking, and underlying conditions,
such as diabetes and high blood pressure, can all increase the risk of
birth complications, and this was evident among the women studied.
But
even after taking account of all these influential factors, women who
had had a prior infection with either chlamydia or gonorrhoea were still
at heightened risk.
Women who had had chlamydia were not at
increased risk of giving birth to a small for dates baby. But they were
17% more likely to have an unplanned premature birth and 40% more likely
to have a stillborn baby.
Women who had had gonorrhoea were more
than twice as likely to have an unplanned premature birth, but they were
not at increased risk of giving birth to a small for dates baby.
There were too few women with a previous diagnosis of gonorrhoea to be able to assess the impact of the infection to stillbirth.
For
women previously diagnosed with chlamydia, the risk of an unplanned
premature birth did not differ between those diagnosed more than a year
before conception, within a year of conception, or during the pregnancy.
The authors caution that their findings don't allow them to prove cause
and effect. The infections may simply be a marker for women at high
risk of birth complications.
And while there is some evidence to
suggest that chronic inflammation?such as would arise particularly with
chlamydia infection?can trigger an unplanned premature birth, trials of
prophylactic antibiotics given to women during pregnancy, have not
lowered this risk.
Nevertheless, the authors conclude: "Our
results suggest that sexually transmissible infections in pregnancy and
the preconception period may be important in predicting adverse
obstetric outcomes."
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