McKinney David, House Melissa, Chen Aimin, Muglia Louis, DeFranco Emily
Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH.
Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH; Division of Neonatology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2017 Mar;216(3):316.e1-316.e9. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2016.12.018. Epub 2016 Dec 27.
In Ohio, the infant mortality rate is above the national average and the black infant mortality rate is more than twice the white infant mortality rate. Having a short interpregnancy interval has been shown to correlate with preterm birth and low birthweight, but the effect of short interpregnancy interval on infant mortality is less well established.
We sought to quantify the population impact of interpregnancy interval on the risk of infant mortality.
This was a statewide population-based retrospective cohort study of all births (n = 1,131,070) and infant mortalities (n = 8152) using linked Ohio birth and infant death records from January 2007 through September 2014. For this study we analyzed 5 interpregnancy interval categories: 0-<6, 6-<12, 12-<24, 24-<60, and ≥60 months. The primary outcome for this study was infant mortality. During the study period, 3701 infant mortalities were linked to a live birth certificate with an interpregnancy interval available. We calculated the frequency and relative risk of infant mortality for each interval compared to a referent interval of 12-<24 months. Stratified analyses by maternal race were also performed. Adjusted risks were estimated after accounting for statistically significant and biologically plausible confounding variables. Adjusted relative risk was utilized to calculate the attributable risk percent of short interpregnancy intervals on infant mortality.
Short interpregnancy intervals were common in Ohio during the study period. Of all multiparous births, 20.5% followed an interval of <12 months. The overall infant mortality rate during this time was 7.2 per 1000 live births (6.0 for white mothers and 13.1 for black mothers). Infant mortalities occurred more frequently for births following short intervals of 0-<6 months (9.2 per 1000) and 6-<12 months (7.1 per 1000) compared to 12-<24 months (5.6 per 1000) (P < .001 and <.001). The highest risk for infant mortality followed interpregnancy intervals of 0-<6 months (adjusted relative risk, 1.32; 95% confidence interval, 1.17-1.49) followed by interpregnancy intervals of 6-<12 months (adjusted relative risk, 1.16; 95% confidence interval, 1.04-1.30). Analysis stratified by maternal race revealed similar findings. Attributable risk calculation showed that 24.2% of infant mortalities following intervals of 0-<6 months and 14.1% with intervals of 6-<12 months are attributable to the short interpregnancy interval. By avoiding short interpregnancy intervals of ≤12 months we estimate that in the state of Ohio 31 infant mortalities (20 white and 8 black) per year could have been prevented and the infant mortality rate could have been reduced from 7.2-7.0 during this time frame.
An interpregnancy interval of 12-60 months (1-5 years) between birth and conception of next pregnancy is associated with lowest risk of infant mortality. Public health initiatives and provider counseling to optimize birth spacing has the potential to significantly reduce infant mortality for both white and black mothers.
在俄亥俄州,婴儿死亡率高于全国平均水平,黑人婴儿死亡率是白人婴儿死亡率的两倍多。已表明妊娠间隔时间短与早产和低出生体重相关,但妊娠间隔时间短对婴儿死亡率的影响尚不明确。
我们试图量化妊娠间隔时间对婴儿死亡风险的人群影响。
这是一项基于全州人口的回顾性队列研究,研究对象为2007年1月至2014年9月俄亥俄州所有出生记录(n = 1,131,070)和婴儿死亡记录(n = 8152)的关联数据。在本研究中,我们分析了5个妊娠间隔类别:0至<6个月、6至<12个月、12至<24个月、24至<60个月以及≥60个月。本研究的主要结局是婴儿死亡。在研究期间,3701例婴儿死亡与有妊娠间隔时间的出生证明相关联。我们计算了每个间隔与12至<24个月的参照间隔相比的婴儿死亡频率和相对风险。还按母亲种族进行了分层分析。在考虑了具有统计学意义且生物学上合理的混杂变量后,估计了调整后的风险。使用调整后的相对风险来计算妊娠间隔时间短对婴儿死亡的归因风险百分比。
在研究期间,俄亥俄州妊娠间隔时间短的情况很常见。在所有经产妇分娩中,20.5%的妊娠间隔时间小于12个月。在此期间,总体婴儿死亡率为每1000例活产7.2例(白人母亲为6.0例,黑人母亲为13.1例)。与12至<24个月(每1000例5.6例)相比,妊娠间隔时间为0至<6个月(每1000例9.2例)和6至<12个月(每1000例7.1例)的婴儿死亡更频繁(P <.001和<.001)。婴儿死亡风险最高的是妊娠间隔时间为0至<6个月(调整后的相对风险,1.32;95%置信区间,1.17 - 1.49),其次是6至<12个月(调整后的相对风险,1.16;95%置信区间,1.04 - 1.30)。按母亲种族分层分析得出了类似的结果。归因风险计算表明,妊娠间隔时间为0至<6个月的婴儿死亡中有24.2%以及6至<12个月的婴儿死亡中有14.1%可归因于妊娠间隔时间短。通过避免≤12个月的短妊娠间隔,我们估计在俄亥俄州每年可预防31例婴儿死亡(20例白人婴儿和8例黑人婴儿),在此期间婴儿死亡率可从7.2降至7.0。
下次妊娠的出生与受孕之间的妊娠间隔时间为12至60个月(1至5年)与婴儿死亡风险最低相关。优化生育间隔的公共卫生举措和医生咨询有可能显著降低白人和黑人母亲的婴儿死亡率。