Abstract
Previous studies of fetal death with maternal influenza have been inconsistent. We explored the effect of maternal influenza-like illness (ILI) in pregnancy on the risk of fetal death, distinguishing between diagnoses during regular influenza seasons and the 2009/2010 pandemic and between trimesters of ILI. We used birth records from the Medical Birth Registry of Norway to identify fetal deaths after the first trimester in singleton pregnancies (2006–2013). The Norwegian Directorate of Health provided dates of clinical influenza diagnoses by primary-health-care providers, whereas dates of laboratory-confirmed influenza A (H1N1) diagnoses were provided by the Norwegian Surveillance System for Communicable Diseases. We obtained dates and types of influenza vaccinations from the Norwegian Immunisation Registry. Cox proportional-hazards regression models were fitted to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) of fetal death, with associated 95% confidence intervals (CIs), comparing women with and without an ILI diagnosis in pregnancy. There were 2510 fetal deaths among 417,406 eligible pregnancies. ILI during regular seasons was not associated with increased risk of fetal death: adjusted HR = 0.90 (95% CI 0.64–1.27). In contrast, ILI during the pandemic was associated with substantially increased risk of fetal death, with an adjusted HR of 1.75 (95% CI 1.21–2.54). The risk was highest following first-trimester ILI (adjusted HR = 2.28 [95% CI 1.45–3.59]). ILI during the pandemic—but not during regular seasons—was associated with increased risk of fetal death in the second and third trimester. The estimated effect was strongest with ILI in first trimester.
Highlights
Several previous studies have assessed associations between maternal influenza virus infection in pregnancy and adverse maternal and pregnancy outcomes [1, 2].Pregnant women are at increased risk of morbidity related to seasonal influenza [3,4,5]
A US study of pregnant women hospitalized during influenza seasons in 1998–2008 demonstrated increased odds of intrauterine fetal demise among delivery hospitalizations complicated by respiratory illness compared to non-respiratory delivery hospitalizations [12]
There was a marked predominance of clinical R80 diagnoses from primary health care over laboratory-confirmed H1N1 diagnoses among the influenza-like illness (ILI) cases
Summary
Pregnant women are at increased risk of morbidity related to seasonal influenza [3,4,5]. A US study of respiratory illness in pregnant women found no statistically significant association between respiratory hospitalization during influenza seasons in 1985–1993 and fetal. In a Danish study of the temporal association between influenza activity and frequency of fetal death in 1994–2009, there was no statistically significant correlation between time series of weekly influenza-like illness (ILI) consultation proportions and time series of weekly proportions of spontaneous abortions or stillbirths [11]. A US study of pregnant women hospitalized during influenza seasons in 1998–2008 demonstrated increased odds of intrauterine fetal demise among delivery hospitalizations complicated by respiratory illness compared to non-respiratory delivery hospitalizations [12]. This study was considered to be at a very high risk of diagnostic ascertainment bias [2]
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