Author: Crossetteâ€Thambiah, Christina; Nicolson, Phillip; Rajakaruna, Indika; Langridge, Alexander; Sayar, Zara; Perelta, Maria R.; Essex, Sarah; Oakes, Roderick; Mounter, Philip; Lewis, Sarah; Dutt, Tina; Scott, Ian; Aung, Nini; Shapiro, Susie; Laffan, Mike; Arachchillage, Deepa R. J.
Title: The clinical course of COVIDâ€19 in pregnant versus nonâ€pregnant women requiring hospitalisation: results from the multicentre UK CAâ€COVIDâ€19 study Cord-id: 0avilikk Document date: 2021_6_24
ID: 0avilikk
Snippet: The impact of COVIDâ€19 infection on pregnant women remains relatively unknown but the physiological changes of pregnancy and hypercoagulability of COVIDâ€19 may further increase thrombotic risk. In this retrospective multicentre observational study, we report clinical characteristics and outcomes in 36 pregnant women requiring hospitalisation for COVIDâ€19 compared to a propensityâ€matched cohort of nonâ€pregnant women. Pregnant women had a lower haemoglobin and higher lymphocyte counts bu
Document: The impact of COVIDâ€19 infection on pregnant women remains relatively unknown but the physiological changes of pregnancy and hypercoagulability of COVIDâ€19 may further increase thrombotic risk. In this retrospective multicentre observational study, we report clinical characteristics and outcomes in 36 pregnant women requiring hospitalisation for COVIDâ€19 compared to a propensityâ€matched cohort of nonâ€pregnant women. Pregnant women had a lower haemoglobin and higher lymphocyte counts but no differences in other haematological or biochemical parameters on admission compared to nonâ€pregnant women. There was no significant difference in the duration of hospitalisation; median two days (1–77) for pregnant versus eight days (1–49) for nonâ€pregnant women. A higher proportion of nonâ€pregnant women required mechanical ventilation [11/36 (31%) vs 3/36 (8%), P = 0·03] and received thromboprophylaxis with lowâ€molecularâ€weight heparin (LMWH) within 24 h of admission [25/36 (69%) vs 15 /36(42%), P = 0·03] compared to pregnant women. One pregnant woman required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. The rate of thrombosis was similar in both groups (one in each group). No women developed major bleeding or died. Data suggest that although nonâ€pregnant women had a severe clinical course, overall outcomes were not different between women with or without pregnancy. The use of thromboprophylaxis was inconsistent, demonstrating a need for establishing evidenceâ€based guidance for COVIDâ€19 during pregnancy.
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