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Pregnancy and fetal outcomes of chronic hepatitis C mothers with viremia in China

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摘要 BACKGROUND Data that assess maternal and infant outcomes in hepatitis C virus(HCV)-infected mothers are limited.AIM To investigate the frequency of complications and the associated risk factors.METHODS We performed a cohort study to compare pregnancy and fetal outcomes of HCVviremic mothers with those of healthy mothers.Risk factors were analyzed with logistic regression.RESULTS Among 112 consecutive HCV antibody-positive mothers screened,we enrolled 79 viremic mothers.We randomly selected 115 healthy mothers from the birth registry as the control.Compared to healthy mothers,HCV mothers had a significantly higher frequency of anemia[2.6%(3/115)vs 19.0%(15/79),P<0.001]during pregnancy,medical conditions that required caesarian section[27.8%(32/115)vs 48.1%(38/79),P=0.004],and nuchal cords[9.6%(11/115)vs 34.2%(27/79),P<0.001].In addition,the mean neonatal weight in the HCV group was significantly lower(3278.3±462.0 vs 3105.1±459.4 gms;P=0.006),and the mean head circumference was smaller(33.3±0.6 vs 33.1±0.7 cm;P=0.03).In a multivariate model,HCV-infected mothers were more likely to suffer anemia[adjusted odds ratio(OR):18.1,95%confidence interval(CI):4.3-76.6],require caesarian sections(adjusted OR:2.6,95%CI:1.4-4.9),and have nuchal cords(adjusted OR:5.6,95%CI:2.4-13.0).Their neonates were also more likely to have smaller head circumferences(adjusted OR:2.1,95%CI:1.1-4.3)and lower birth weights than the average(≤3250 gms)with an adjusted OR of 2.2(95%CI:1.2-4.0).The vertical transmission rate was 1%in HCV-infected mothers.CONCLUSION Maternal HCV infections may associate with pregnancy and obstetric complications.We demonstrated a previously unreported association between maternal HCV viremia and a smaller neonatal head circumference,suggesting fetal growth restriction.
出处 《World Journal of Gastroenterology》 SCIE CAS 2022年第34期5023-5035,共13页 世界胃肠病学杂志(英文版)
基金 Supported by The Ministry of Science and Technology of China for the National Five-Year Key Projects in Infectious Diseases,No. 2015ZX10004801
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