Smith Gordon C S, Pell Jill P, Dobbie Richard
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Cambridge University, Box The Rosie Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2QQ.
BMJ. 2003 Aug 9;327(7410):313. doi: 10.1136/bmj.327.7410.313.
To determine whether a short interval between pregnancies is an independent risk factor for adverse obstetric outcome.
Retrospective cohort study.
Scotland.
89 143 women having second births in 1992-8 who conceived within five years of their first birth.
Intrauterine growth restriction (birth weight less than the 5th centile for gestational age), extremely preterm birth (24-32 weeks), moderately preterm birth (33-36 weeks), and perinatal death.
Women whose subsequent interpregnancy interval was less than six months were more likely than other women to have had a first birth complicated by intrauterine growth restriction (odds ratio 1.3, 95% confidence interval 1.1 to 1.5), extremely preterm birth (4.1, 3.2 to 5.3), moderately preterm birth (1.5, 1.3 to 1.7), or perinatal death (24.4, 18.9 to 31.5). They were also shorter, less likely to be married, and more likely to be aged less than 20 years at the time of the second birth, to smoke, and to live in an area of high socioeconomic deprivation. When the outcome of the second birth was analysed in relation to the preceding interpregnancy interval and the analysis confined to women whose first birth was a term live birth (n = 69 055), no significant association occurred (adjusted for age, marital status, height, socioeconomic deprivation, smoking, previous birth weight vigesimal, and previous caesarean delivery) between interpregnancy interval and intrauterine growth restriction or stillbirth. However, a short interpregnancy interval (< 6 months) was an independent risk factor for extremely preterm birth (adjusted odds ratio 2.2, 1.3 to 3.6), moderately preterm birth (1.6, 1.3 to 2.0), and neonatal death unrelated to congenital abnormality (3.6, 1.2 to 10.7). The adjusted attributable fractions for these associations were 6.1%, 3.9%, and 13.8%. The associations were very similar when the analysis was confined to married non-smokers aged 25 and above.
A short interpregnancy interval is an independent risk factor for preterm delivery and neonatal death in the second birth.
确定妊娠间隔时间短是否为不良产科结局的独立危险因素。
回顾性队列研究。
苏格兰。
1992年至1988年间第二次分娩且在首次分娩后五年内受孕的89143名女性。
宫内生长受限(出生体重低于胎龄的第5百分位数)、极早产(24 - 32周)、中度早产(33 - 36周)及围产期死亡。
后续妊娠间隔时间少于6个月的女性比其他女性更有可能首次分娩时合并宫内生长受限(比值比1.3,95%置信区间1.1至1.5)、极早产(4.1,3.2至5.3)、中度早产(1.5,1.3至1.7)或围产期死亡(24.4,18.9至31.5)。她们身材也更矮,结婚可能性更小,第二次分娩时年龄小于20岁、吸烟及生活在社会经济剥夺程度高的地区的可能性更大。当分析第二次分娩结局与之前的妊娠间隔时间的关系且分析仅限于首次分娩为足月活产的女性(n = 69055)时,妊娠间隔时间与宫内生长受限或死产之间无显著关联(校正了年龄、婚姻状况、身高、社会经济剥夺程度、吸烟、前次出生体重十分位数及前次剖宫产)。然而,妊娠间隔时间短(< 6个月)是极早产(校正比值比2.2,1.3至3.6)、中度早产(1.6,1.3至2.0)及与先天性异常无关的新生儿死亡(3.6,1.2至10.7)的独立危险因素。这些关联的校正归因分数分别为6.1%、3.9%和13.8%。当分析仅限于25岁及以上已婚不吸烟女性时,关联非常相似。
妊娠间隔时间短是第二次分娩时早产和新生儿死亡的独立危险因素。