Maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 infection: A systematic review

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Vinayak Smith
  • Densearn Seo
  • Ritesh Warty
  • Olivia Payne
  • Mohamed Salih
  • Ken Lee Chin
  • Richard Ofori-Asenso
  • Sathya Krishnan
  • Fabricio da Silva Costa
  • Beverley Vollenhoven
  • Euan Wallace

Background

COVID-19 has created an extraordinary global health crisis. However, with limited understanding of the effects of COVID-19 during pregnancy, clinicians and patients are forced to make uninformed decisions.

Objectives

To systematically evaluate the literature and report the maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with COVID-19.

Search strategy

PubMed, MEDLINE, and EMBASE were searched from November 1(st), 2019 and March 28(th), 2020.

Selection criteria

Primary studies, reported in English, investigating COVID-19-positive pregnant women and reporting their pregnancy and neonatal outcomes.

Data collection and analysis

Data in relation to clinical presentation, investigation were maternal and neonatal outcomes were extracted and analysed using summary statistics. Hypothesis testing was performed to examine differences in time-to-delivery. Study quality was assessed using the ICROMS tool.

Main results

Of 73 identified articles, nine were eligible for inclusion (n = 92). 67.4% (62/92) of women were symptomatic at presentation. RT-PCR was inferior to CT-based diagnosis in 31.7% (26/79) of cases. Maternal mortality rate was 0% and only one patient required intensive care and ventilation. 63.8% (30/47) had preterm births, 61.1% (11/18) fetal distress and 80% (40/50) a Caesarean section. 76.92% (11/13) of neonates required NICU admission and 42.8% (40/50) had a low birth weight. There was one indeterminate case of potential vertical transmission. Mean time-to-delivery was 4.3 +/- 3.08 days (n = 12) with no difference in outcomes (p>0.05).

Conclusions

COVID-19-positive pregnant women present with fewer symptoms than the general population and may be RT-PCR negative despite having signs of viral pneumonia. The incidence of preterm births, low birth weight, C-section, NICU admission appear higher than the general population.

Original languageEnglish
Article number0234187
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume15
Issue number6
Number of pages13
ISSN1932-6203
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

    Research areas

  • PNEUMONIA, DELIVERY, BIRTH, CHINA

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