Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Clinical Division of Gynecological Endocrinology and Reproductive Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Tyrolean Federal Institute for Integrated Care, Tirol Kliniken GmbH, Innsbruck, Austria.
Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand. 2024 Sep;103(9):1820-1828. doi: 10.1111/aogs.14880. Epub 2024 Jun 28.
Women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) have a higher risk for fetal and maternal complications. We aimed to investigate maternal and fetal complications in pregnant women with SLE compared to a high-risk pregnancy cohort (HR) from a tertiary university center and a standard-risk general population (SR) from the Austrian Birth Registry.
In this retrospective data analysis, we compared the incidence of fetal/neonatal and maternal complications of pregnancies and deliveries of women with SLE to age, body mass index and delivery date-matched high-risk pregnancies from the same department, a progressive tertiary obstetric center and to a group of women, who represent pregnancies with standard obstetric risk from the Austrian Birth Registry.
One hundred women with SLE were compared to 300 women with high-risk pregnancies and 207 039 women with standard-risk pregnancies. The incidence of composite maternal complications (preeclampsia, Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes and Low Platelets [HELLP] syndrome, pregnancy-related hypertension, gestational diabetes mellitus, maternal death, thromboembolic events) was significantly higher in the SLE as compared to the SR group (28% vs. 6.28% SLE vs. SR, p = 0.001). There was no difference between the SLE and the HR groups (28% vs. 29.6% SLE vs. HR group, p = 0.80). The incidence of composite fetal complications (preterm birth before 37 weeks of gestation, stillbirths, birthweight less than 2500 g, fetal growth restriction, large for gestational age, admission to neonatal intensive care unit, 5-min Apgar <7) was also higher in the SLE than in the SR group (55% vs. 25.54% SLE vs. SR p < 0.001) while the higher incidence of adverse fetal outcome was detected in the HR than in the SLE group (55% vs. 75% SLE vs. HR group, p = 0.0005).
Although composite fetal risk is higher in the SLE group than in the general population, it is still significantly lower as compared to high-risk pregnant women at a tertiary obstetric center. Prepregnancy counseling of women with SLE should put fetal and maternal risk in perspective, not only in relation to healthy, low risk cohorts, but also compared to mixed HR populations.
患有系统性红斑狼疮 (SLE) 的女性发生胎儿和母体并发症的风险更高。我们旨在研究与高危妊娠队列(高危组)相比,SLE 孕妇的母婴并发症,高危组来自三级大学中心,标准风险一般人群(标准风险组)来自奥地利出生登记处。
在这项回顾性数据分析中,我们将 SLE 孕妇的胎儿/新生儿和母体并发症的发生率与同一科室、一个逐步发展的三级产科中心的高危妊娠和奥地利出生登记处标准产科风险的一组妇女的年龄、体重指数和分娩日期相匹配的高危妊娠进行了比较。
100 名 SLE 患者与 300 名高危妊娠患者和 207039 名标准风险妊娠患者进行了比较。SLE 组复合母体并发症(子痫前期、溶血、肝酶升高和血小板减少 [HELLP] 综合征、妊娠相关高血压、妊娠期糖尿病、产妇死亡、血栓栓塞事件)的发生率明显高于标准风险组(28% vs. 6.28%SLE vs. 标准风险组,p=0.001)。SLE 组与高危组之间无差异(28%vs. 29.6%SLE vs. 高危组,p=0.80)。SLE 组复合胎儿并发症(37 周前早产、死产、出生体重<2500g、胎儿生长受限、大于胎龄、新生儿重症监护病房入院、5 分钟 Apgar<7)的发生率也高于标准风险组(55% vs. 25.54%SLE vs. 标准风险组,p<0.001),而高危组的不良胎儿结局发生率高于 SLE 组(55% vs. 75%SLE vs. 高危组,p=0.0005)。
尽管 SLE 组的复合胎儿风险高于一般人群,但与三级产科中心的高危孕妇相比,风险仍明显较低。SLE 女性的孕前咨询应正确看待胎儿和母体风险,不仅要与健康的低风险人群相比较,还要与混合高危人群相比较。