Increased risk of stillbirth
in older pregnant Boomer women
Pregnancy at age 40 and beyond is an independent risk factor for
intrauterine fetal demise or stillbirth, according to an abstract presented
by Yale School of Medicine researchers at the Society for Maternal-Fetal
Medicine Conference February 10 in San Francisco.
The
researchers also found that fetal testing at 38 weeks gestation has the
greatest impact at reducing stillbirth rates in older women.
Pregnant patients of advanced maternal age (AMA) are at increased risk for a
multitude of pregnancy complications, including gestational diabetes
mellitus, preeclampsia, placenta previa and intrauterine growth restriction.
All of these conditions have been associated with a higher rate of
stillbirth.
To
determine if AMA was an independent risk factor for stillbirth, and when
fetal testing would be most beneficial for reducing stillbirth rates, the
authors conducted a cross-sectional study using the United States CDC
perinatal mortality database. The database is made up of 11,061,599
singleton deliveries between 1995 and 1997. The women in the study were
between 15 to 44 years of age who were at least 37 weeks pregnant.
"Our
results support routine antenatal testing in those women who are over age
40, beginning at 38 weeks gestation," said first author Mert Ozan Bahtiyar,
M.D., professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive
Sciences at Yale School of Medicine. "This will help identify women who are
most at risk for stillbirth.
###
Other
authors on the abstract included Edmund Funai, Errol Norwitz, Catalin
Buhimschi, Victor Rosenberg and Joshua Copel.
Abstract Title: "Advanced Maternal Age (AMA) is an Independent Predictor of
Intrauterine Fetal Death at Term."