Waterstone M, Bewley S, Wolfe C
Department of Public Health Medicine, Guy's, King's College, and St Thomas's Hospitals Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, Capital House, London SE1 3QD.
BMJ. 2001 May 5;322(7294):1089-93; discussion 1093-4. doi: 10.1136/bmj.322.7294.1089.
To estimate the incidence and predictors of severe obstetric morbidity.
Development of definitions of severe obstetric morbidity by literature review. Case-control study from a defined delivery population with four randomly selected pregnant women as controls for every case.
All 19 maternity units within the South East Thames region and six neighbouring hospitals caring for pregnant women from the region between 1 March 1997 and 28 February 1998.
48 865 women who delivered during the time frame.
There were 588 cases of severe obstetric morbidity giving an incidence of 12.0/1000 deliveries (95% confidence interval 11.2 to 13.2). During the study there were five maternal deaths attributed to conditions studied. Disease specific morbidities per 1000 deliveries were 6.7 (6.0 to 7.5) for severe haemorrhage, 3.9 (3.3 to 4.5) for severe pre-eclampsia, 0.2 (0.1 to 0.4) for eclampsia, 0.5 (0.3 to 0.8) for HELLP (Haemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, and Low Platelets) syndrome, 0.4 (0.2 to 0.6) for severe sepsis, and 0.2 (0.1 to 0.4) for uterine rupture. Age over 34 years, non-white ethnic group, past or current hypertension, previous postpartum haemorrhage, delivery by emergency caesarean section, antenatal admission to hospital, multiple pregnancy, social exclusion, and taking iron or anti-depressants at antenatal booking were all independently associated with morbidity after adjustment.
Severe obstetric morbidity and its relation to mortality may be more sensitive measures of pregnancy outcome than mortality alone. Most events are related to obstetric haemorrhage and severe pre-eclampsia. Caesarean section quadruples the risk of morbidity. Development and evaluation of ways of predicting and reducing risk are required with particular emphasis paid on the management of haemorrhage and pre-eclampsia.
评估严重产科并发症的发生率及预测因素。
通过文献综述制定严重产科并发症的定义。对特定分娩人群进行病例对照研究,每例病例随机选取4名孕妇作为对照。
1997年3月1日至1998年2月28日期间,泰晤士河东南部地区的所有19个产科单位以及为该地区孕妇提供护理的6家邻近医院。
在此时间段内分娩的48865名妇女。
有588例严重产科并发症,发生率为12.0/1000次分娩(95%置信区间为11.2至13.2)。研究期间,有5例孕产妇死亡归因于所研究的病症。每1000次分娩中特定疾病的并发症发生率分别为:严重出血6.7(6.0至7.5)、重度子痫前期3.9(3.3至4.5)、子痫0.2(0.1至0.4)、HELLP(溶血、肝酶升高和血小板减少)综合征0.5(0.3至0.8)、严重脓毒症0.4(0.2至)
严重产科并发症及其与死亡率的关系可能是比单纯死亡率更敏感的妊娠结局衡量指标。大多数事件与产科出血和重度子痫前期有关。剖宫产使并发症风险增加四倍。需要开展预测和降低风险方法的开发与评估,尤其要重视出血和子痫前期的管理。