Giakoumelou Sevi, Wheelhouse Nick, Cuschieri Kate, Entrican Gary, Howie Sarah E M, Horne Andrew W
Centre for Reproductive Health, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH16 4TJ, UK.
Moredun Research Institute, Pentlands Science Park, Bush Loan, Edinburgh EH26 0PZ, UK.
Hum Reprod Update. 2016 Jan-Feb;22(1):116-33. doi: 10.1093/humupd/dmv041. Epub 2015 Sep 19.
Miscarriage is the spontaneous loss of a pregnancy before 12 weeks (early miscarriage) or from 12 to 24 weeks (late miscarriage) of gestation. Miscarriage occurs in one in five pregnancies and can have considerable physiological and psychological implications for the patient. It is also associated with significant health care costs. There is evidence that potentially preventable infections may account for up to 15% of early miscarriages and up to 66% of late miscarriages. However, the provision of associated screening and management algorithms is inconsistent for newly pregnant women. Here, we review recent population-based studies on infections that have been shown to be associated with miscarriage.
Our aim was to examine where the current scientific focus lies with regards to the role of infection in miscarriage. Papers dating from June 2009 with key words 'miscarriage' and 'infection' or 'infections' were identified in PubMed (292 and 327 papers, respectively, on 2 June 2014). Relevant human studies (meta-analyses, case-control studies, cohort studies or case series) were included. Single case reports were excluded. The studies were scored based on the Newcastle - Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale.
The association of systemic infections with malaria, brucellosis, cytomegalovirus and human immunodeficiency virus, dengue fever, influenza virus and of vaginal infection with bacterial vaginosis, with increased risk of miscarriage has been demonstrated. Q fever, adeno-associated virus, Bocavirus, Hepatitis C and Mycoplasma genitalium infections do not appear to affect pregnancy outcome. The effects of Chlamydia trachomatis, Toxoplasma gondii, human papillomavirus, herpes simplex virus, parvovirus B19, Hepatitis B and polyomavirus BK infections remain controversial, as some studies indicate increased miscarriage risk and others show no increased risk. The latest data on rubella and syphilis indicate increased antenatal screening worldwide and a decrease in the frequency of their reported associations with pregnancy failure. Though various pathogens have been associated with miscarriage, the mechanism(s) of infection-induced miscarriage are not yet fully elucidated.
Further research is required to clarify whether certain infections do increase miscarriage risk and whether screening of newly pregnant women for treatable infections would improve reproductive outcomes.
流产是指妊娠12周前(早期流产)或妊娠12至24周(晚期流产)的自然流产。五分之一的妊娠会发生流产,这可能对患者产生相当大的生理和心理影响。它还与高昂的医疗费用相关。有证据表明,潜在可预防的感染可能占早期流产的15%,占晚期流产的66%。然而,为新怀孕女性提供相关筛查和管理方案并不一致。在此,我们回顾了近期基于人群的、已证明与流产相关的感染研究。
我们的目的是研究当前关于感染在流产中作用的科学重点所在。在PubMed中检索了2009年6月以来标题中含有关键词“流产”和“感染”或“感染(复数)”的论文(2014年6月2日分别检索到292篇和327篇论文)。纳入了相关的人体研究(荟萃分析、病例对照研究、队列研究或病例系列)。排除单一病例报告。根据纽卡斯尔 - 渥太华质量评估量表对研究进行评分。
已证实全身性感染如疟疾、布鲁氏菌病、巨细胞病毒、人类免疫缺陷病毒、登革热、流感病毒,以及阴道感染如细菌性阴道病,会增加流产风险。Q热、腺相关病毒、博卡病毒、丙型肝炎和生殖支原体感染似乎不影响妊娠结局。沙眼衣原体、弓形虫、人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)、单纯疱疹病毒、细小病毒B19、乙型肝炎和BK多瘤病毒感染的影响仍存在争议,因为一些研究表明流产风险增加,而另一些研究则显示风险未增加。关于风疹和梅毒的最新数据表明,全球范围内产前筛查增加,且它们与妊娠失败的关联报告频率降低。尽管多种病原体与流产相关,但感染导致流产的机制尚未完全阐明。
需要进一步研究以明确某些感染是否确实会增加流产风险,以及对新怀孕女性进行可治疗感染的筛查是否会改善生殖结局。