Abstract

PurposePreterm delivery is a major cause of child mortality. While the relationship between parity and preterm delivery is known, its association with gestational duration and variability remains underexplored. Differences in variance may suggest interaction with other well-established risk factors. MethodsWith 1.1 million spontaneous deliveries (1990–2012) from the Swedish Medical Birth Register, we assessed while accounting for potential confounders the effects of parity on the mean and variance of gestational duration, and its possible interactions with history of preterm delivery. Pedigrees allowed to account for nonobserved, shared confounders using linear mixed models. ResultsParity has a modest association with mean gestational duration, but a large effect on its variance. For example, the first pregnancy had the shortest mean gestational duration, 0.29 days shorter (95% CI: −0.33, −0.25) than the second, and the largest variance (σ2 = 135 days2). Accounting for shared unobserved confounders highlighted a group effect bias, likely linked to the mothers’ total number of offspring. Parity interacts with other risk factors, including previous preterm delivery where the magnitude of its effect increases with parity (up to 4.6 days effect difference). ConclusionsNonshared factors across a mother's pregnancies highlight parity's importance to gain insight into the mechanisms governing the timing of delivery.

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