33 research outputs found
Effect of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ19) on maternal, perinatal and neonatal outcome: systematic review.
Objective To evaluate the effect of coronavirus disease
2019 (COVID-19) on maternal, perinatal and neonatal
outcome by performing a systematic review of available
published literature on pregnancies affected by
COVID-19.
Methods We performed a systematic review to evaluate
the effect of COVID-19 on pregnancy, perinatal
and neonatal outcome. We conducted a comprehensive
literature search using PubMed, EMBASE, the
Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure
Database and Wan Fang Data up to and
including 20 April 2020 (studies were identified through
PubMed alert after that date). For the search strategy,
combinations of the following keywords and medical
subject heading (MeSH) terms were used: âSARS-CoV-2â,
âCOVID-19â, âcoronavirus disease 2019â, âpregnancyâ,
âgestationâ, âmaternalâ, âmotherâ, âvertical transmissionâ,
âmaternalâfetal transmissionâ, âintrauterine transmissionâ,
âneonateâ, âinfantâ and âdeliveryâ. Eligibility criteria
included laboratory-confirmed and/or clinically diagnosed
COVID-19, patient being pregnant on admission and
availability of clinical characteristics, including at least
one maternal, perinatal or neonatal outcome. Exclusion
criteria were non-peer-reviewed or unpublished reports,
unspecified date and location of the study, suspicion of duplicate reporting and unreported maternal or perinatal
outcomes. No language restrictions were applied.
Results We identified a high number of relevant case
reports and case series, but only 24 studies, including
a total of 324 pregnant women with COVID-19,
met the eligibility criteria and were included in the
systematic review. These comprised nine case series
(eight consecutive) and 15 case reports. A total of 20
pregnant patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19
were included in the case reports. In the combined data
from the eight consecutive case series, including 211
(71.5%) cases of laboratory-confirmed and 84 (28.5%)
of clinically diagnosed COVID-19, the maternal age
ranged from 20 to 44 years and the gestational age
on admission ranged from 5 to 41weeks. The most
common symptoms at presentation were fever, cough,
dyspnea/shortness of breath, fatigue and myalgia. The
rate of severe pneumonia reported amongst the case series
ranged from 0% to 14%, with the majority of the cases
requiring admission to the intensive care unit. Almost
all cases from the case series had positive computed
tomography chest findings. All six and 22 cases that
had nucleic-acid testing in vaginal mucus and breast
milk samples, respectively, were negative for severe acute
respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Only
four cases of spontaneous miscarriage or termination were
reported. In the consecutive case series, 219/295 women
had delivered at the time of reporting and 78% of them
had Cesarean section. The gestational age at delivery
ranged from 28 to 41 weeks. Apgar scores at both 1 and
5 min ranged from 7 to 10. Only eight neonates had
birth weight <2500 g and nearly one-third of neonates
were transferred to the neonatal intensive care unit. There
was one case of neonatal asphyxia and death. In 155
neonates that had nucleic-acid testing in throat swab, all,
except three cases, were negative for SARS-CoV-2. There
were no cases of maternal death in the eight consecutive
case series. Seven maternal deaths, four intrauterine fetal
deaths (one with twin pregnancy) and two neonatal deaths
(twin pregnancy) were reported in a non-consecutive case
series of nine cases with severe COVID-19. In the case
reports, two maternal deaths, one neonatal death and two
cases of neonatal SARS-CoV-2 infection were reported.
Conclusions Despite the increasing number of published
studies on COVID-19 in pregnancy, there are insufficient
good-quality data to draw unbiased conclusions with
regard to the severity of the disease or specific
complications of COVID-19 in pregnant women, as
well as vertical transmission, perinatal and neonatal
complications. In order to answer specific questions in
relation to the impact of COVID-19 on pregnant women
and their fetuses, through meaningful good-quality
research, we urge researchers and investigators to
present complete outcome data and reference previously
published cases in their publications, and to record such
reporting when the data of a case are entered into one
or several registries.post-print1026 K
Recommended from our members
Oxidative discolouration in whole-head and cut lettuce: biochemical and environmental influences on a complex phenotype and potential breeding strategies to improve shelf-life
Lettuce discolouration is a key post-harvest trait. The major enzyme controlling oxidative discolouration
has long been considered to be polyphenol oxidase (PPO) however, levels of PPO and subsequent development of discolouration symptoms have not always correlated. The predominance of a latent state of the enzyme in plant tissues combined with substrate activation and contemporaneous suicide inactivation
mechanisms are considered as potential explanations for
this phenomenon. Leaf tissue physical properties have
been associated with subsequent discolouration and
these may be influenced by variation in nutrient
availability, especially excess nitrogen and head maturity at harvest. Mild calcium and irrigation stress has
also been associated with a reduction in subsequent
discolouration, although excess irrigation has been
linked to increased discolouration potentially through
leaf physical properties. These environmental factors,
including high temperature and UV light intensities,
often have impacts on levels of phenolic compounds
linking the environmental responses to the biochemistry
of the PPO pathway. Breeding strategies targeting the
PALand PPOpathway biochemistry and environmental
response genes are discussed as a more cost-effective
method of mitigating oxidative discolouration then
either modified atmosphere packaging or post-harvest
treatments, although current understanding of the
biochemistry means that such programs are likely to
be limited in nature and it is likely that they will need to be deployed alongside other methods for the foreseeable future