Early risk factors for miscarriage: a prospective cohort study in pregnant women.

  • Petra Arck
  • Mirjam Rücke
  • Matthias Rose
  • Julia Szekeres-Bartho
  • Alison J Douglas
  • Maria Pritsch
  • Sandra M Blois
  • Maike K Pincus
  • Nina Bärenstrauch
  • Joachim W Dudenhausen
  • Katrina Nakamura
  • Sam Sheps
  • Burghard F Klapp

Abstract

Many pregnancies are lost during early gestation, but clinicians still lack tools to recognize risk factors for miscarriage. Thus, the identification of risk factors for miscarriage during the first trimester in women with no obvious risk for a pregnancy loss was the aim of this prospective cohort trial. A total of 1098 women between gestation weeks 4 and 12 in whom no apparent signs of a threatened pregnancy could be diagnosed were recruited. Demographic, anamnestic, psychometric and biological data were documented at recruitment and pregnancy outcomes were registered subsequently. Among the cases with sufficiently available data, 809 successfully progressing pregnancies and 55 subsequent miscarriages were reported. In this cohort, risk of miscarriage was significantly increased in women at higher age (>33 years), lower body mass index (<or =20 kg/ m(2)) and lower serum progesterone concentrations (<or =12 ng/ml) prior to the onset of the miscarriage. Women with subsequent miscarriage also perceived higher levels of stress/demands (supported by higher concentrations of corticotrophin-releasing hormone) and revealed reduced concentrations of progesterone-induced blocking factor. These risk factors were even more pronounced in the subcohort of women (n = 335) recruited between gestation weeks 4 and 7. The identification of these risk factors and development of an interaction model of these factors, as introduced in this article, will help clinicians to recognize pregnant women who require extra monitoring and who might benefit from therapeutic interventions such as progestogen supplementation, especially during the first weeks of pregnancy, to prevent a miscarriage.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer1
ISSN1472-6483
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2008
pubmed 18616898