<p> The novel coronavirus may infect a higher proportion of pregnant women and they can develop moderate-to-severe diseases, an ICMR study has said, underlining the need for them to seek immediate medical attention.</p>.<p>According to the study published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research, the most common complication were a pre-term delivery and hypertensive disorders in pregnancy.</p>.<p>Comorbidities such as anaemia, tuberculosis and diabetes mellitus were associated with an increased risk of maternal death in pregnant and post-partum women with Covid-19, the study said.</p>.<p>It analysed clinical characteristics and pregnancy outcomes of women with Covid-19 enrolled during the first wave of the pandemic in Maharashtra.</p>.<p>The analysis was based on the data from the PregCovid registry, a study of pregnant women and women in the post-partum period with a confirmed diagnosis of Covid-19.</p>.<p>The PregCovid registry collected information on near-real-time basis on pregnant and post-partum women with a laboratory-confirmed coronavirus infection from 19 medical colleges across Maharashtra.</p>.<p>The data of 4,203 pregnant women collected during the first wave (March 2020-January 2021) was analysed.</p>.<p>"There were 3213 live births, 77 miscarriages and 834 undelivered pregnancies. The proportion of pregnancy/foetal loss including stillbirths was six per cent. Five hundred and thirty-four women (13%) were symptomatic, of which 382 (72%) had mild, 112 (21%) had moderate, and 40 (7.5 %) had severe disease.</p>.<p>“The most common complication was preterm delivery (528, 16.3%) and hypertensive disorders in pregnancy (328, 10.1%). A total of 158 (3.8%) pregnant and post-partum women required intensive care, of which 152 (96%) were due to Covid-19 related complications," the findings of the study stated.</p>.<p>The overall case fatality rate (CFR) in was 0.8 per cent. Higher CFR was observed in Pune (9/853, 1.1%), Marathwada (4/351, 1.1%) regions as compared to Vidarbha (9/1155, 0.8%), Mumbai Metropolitan (11/1684, 0.7%), and Khandesh (1/160, 0.6%) regions.</p>.<p>"Thus, our analysis suggests that SARS-CoV-2 may infect a higher proportion of pregnant women, and when symptomatic, a large proportion can develop moderate-to-severe diseases. Therefore, pregnant women with Covid-19 need immediate medical attention from the healthcare system in India,” said the study.</p>.<p>The finding of tuberculosis as a risk factor is important as India has one of the highest burden of TB in the general population as well as in pregnant women, the study stated.</p>.<p>It suggested the healthcare services for the treatment of tuberculosis and Covid-19 must be integrated and pregnant women with respiratory symptoms tested for both.</p>.<p>There were a total of 34 deaths reported among pregnant and post-partum women with Covid-19, the study said, adding out of 34 maternal deaths, 10 women died during the post-partum period. Twenty-five women (73%) were 30 or below, while the others were in the age range of 30-45 years.</p>.<p>This is the first large-scale report of systematically collected, multicentre data on the clinical presentation, pregnancy outcomes and maternal deaths amongst women with Covid-19 in Maharashtra, the study said.</p>.<p>"The pre-term birth in the present study group (16.3 per cent) is comparable to those reported by other countries. However, in the absence of detailed data of pre-term birth from pregnant women without Covid-19, it is difficult to comment if Covid-19 is a risk factor for pre-term birth," the study stated.</p>.<p>Pregnancy loss is a major health concern for obstetricians and whether Covid-19 is a contributing risk factor is an important aspect to be considered, it said. </p>.<p><strong>Check the latest DH videos here:</strong><br /><br /></p>
<p> The novel coronavirus may infect a higher proportion of pregnant women and they can develop moderate-to-severe diseases, an ICMR study has said, underlining the need for them to seek immediate medical attention.</p>.<p>According to the study published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research, the most common complication were a pre-term delivery and hypertensive disorders in pregnancy.</p>.<p>Comorbidities such as anaemia, tuberculosis and diabetes mellitus were associated with an increased risk of maternal death in pregnant and post-partum women with Covid-19, the study said.</p>.<p>It analysed clinical characteristics and pregnancy outcomes of women with Covid-19 enrolled during the first wave of the pandemic in Maharashtra.</p>.<p>The analysis was based on the data from the PregCovid registry, a study of pregnant women and women in the post-partum period with a confirmed diagnosis of Covid-19.</p>.<p>The PregCovid registry collected information on near-real-time basis on pregnant and post-partum women with a laboratory-confirmed coronavirus infection from 19 medical colleges across Maharashtra.</p>.<p>The data of 4,203 pregnant women collected during the first wave (March 2020-January 2021) was analysed.</p>.<p>"There were 3213 live births, 77 miscarriages and 834 undelivered pregnancies. The proportion of pregnancy/foetal loss including stillbirths was six per cent. Five hundred and thirty-four women (13%) were symptomatic, of which 382 (72%) had mild, 112 (21%) had moderate, and 40 (7.5 %) had severe disease.</p>.<p>“The most common complication was preterm delivery (528, 16.3%) and hypertensive disorders in pregnancy (328, 10.1%). A total of 158 (3.8%) pregnant and post-partum women required intensive care, of which 152 (96%) were due to Covid-19 related complications," the findings of the study stated.</p>.<p>The overall case fatality rate (CFR) in was 0.8 per cent. Higher CFR was observed in Pune (9/853, 1.1%), Marathwada (4/351, 1.1%) regions as compared to Vidarbha (9/1155, 0.8%), Mumbai Metropolitan (11/1684, 0.7%), and Khandesh (1/160, 0.6%) regions.</p>.<p>"Thus, our analysis suggests that SARS-CoV-2 may infect a higher proportion of pregnant women, and when symptomatic, a large proportion can develop moderate-to-severe diseases. Therefore, pregnant women with Covid-19 need immediate medical attention from the healthcare system in India,” said the study.</p>.<p>The finding of tuberculosis as a risk factor is important as India has one of the highest burden of TB in the general population as well as in pregnant women, the study stated.</p>.<p>It suggested the healthcare services for the treatment of tuberculosis and Covid-19 must be integrated and pregnant women with respiratory symptoms tested for both.</p>.<p>There were a total of 34 deaths reported among pregnant and post-partum women with Covid-19, the study said, adding out of 34 maternal deaths, 10 women died during the post-partum period. Twenty-five women (73%) were 30 or below, while the others were in the age range of 30-45 years.</p>.<p>This is the first large-scale report of systematically collected, multicentre data on the clinical presentation, pregnancy outcomes and maternal deaths amongst women with Covid-19 in Maharashtra, the study said.</p>.<p>"The pre-term birth in the present study group (16.3 per cent) is comparable to those reported by other countries. However, in the absence of detailed data of pre-term birth from pregnant women without Covid-19, it is difficult to comment if Covid-19 is a risk factor for pre-term birth," the study stated.</p>.<p>Pregnancy loss is a major health concern for obstetricians and whether Covid-19 is a contributing risk factor is an important aspect to be considered, it said. </p>.<p><strong>Check the latest DH videos here:</strong><br /><br /></p>