Chlamydia, gonorrhea tied to higher risk of pregnancy complications
Women with Chlamydia Infection
or gonorrhea infections before or during pregnancy are at increased
risk for pregnancy complications such as stillbirth and premature birth,
a new study suggests.
Researchers analyzed data from more than
350,000 Australian women who had their first child between 1999 and
2008. Of those women, 1 percent had at least one chlamydia infection
before they gave birth, and 81 percent of those women were diagnosed
before they became pregnant.
The study also found that 0.6 percent
of the women had a gonorrhea infection before they gave birth, and
nearly 85 percent of those women were diagnosed before they became
pregnant. Half of the women diagnosed with gonorrhea had also previously
been infected with chlamydia, found researchers Dr. Bette Liu, at the
University of New South Wales, and colleagues.
Among all the women
in the study, 4 percent had an unplanned premature birth, 12 percent
had babies who were small for their gestational age, and 0.6 percent had
stillborn babies.
After taking into account factors known to
increase the risk of birth complications -- including age, poverty,
smoking and health conditions such as diabetes and high blood pressure
-- the researchers found that a prior infection with either chlamydia or
gonorrhea also increased the risk.
Women who'd had chlamydia transmission
were 17 percent more likely to have an unplanned premature birth and 40
percent more likely to have a stillborn baby. There was no increased
risk of having a baby that was small for its gestational age.
For
women who'd had chlamydia, the risk of an unplanned premature birth did
not differ between those diagnosed with an infection more than a year
before conception, within a year of conception, or during the pregnancy.
Women
who had had gonorrhea were more than twice as likely to have an
unplanned premature birth, but they were not at increased risk of having
a baby that was small for its gestational age, according to the study
published online Sept. 4 in the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections.
Not enough data existed to determine the impact that gonorrhea infection had on the risk of stillbirth.
These
findings don't prove that chlamydia and gonorrhea infections actually
cause pregnancy complications, but do suggest that such infections may
be important in predicting pregnancy complications, the study authors
concluded.
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