1. A systematic scoping review of COVID-19 during pregnancy and childbirth.
- Author
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Elshafeey, Farida, Magdi, Rana, Hindi, Nader, Elshebiny, Mohamed, Farrag, Nourhan, Mahdy, Shahd, Sabbour, Mohamed, Gebril, Sara, Nasser, Mohamed, Kamel, Menna, Amir, Abdelrahman, Maher Emara, Moataz, and Nabhan, Ashraf
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COVID-19 , *CHILDBIRTH , *META-analysis , *PREGNANCY , *PREGNANT women , *STILLBIRTH , *VIRAL pneumonia , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PREGNANCY complications , *EPIDEMICS , *DELIVERY (Obstetrics) , *LABOR (Obstetrics) , *VERTICAL transmission (Communicable diseases) , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Clinical presentation and outcomes of COVID-19 infection during pregnancy remain limited and fragmented.Objectives: To summarize the existing literature on COVID-19 infection during pregnancy and childbirth, particularly concerning clinical presentation and outcomes.Search Strategy: A systematic search of LitCovid, EBSCO MEDLINE, CENTRAL, CINAHL, Web of Science, and Scopus electronic databases. The references of relevant studies were also searched.Selection Criteria: Identified titles and abstracts were screened to select original reports and cross-checked for overlap of cases.Data Collection and Analysis: A descriptive summary organized by aspects of clinical presentations (symptoms, imaging, and laboratory) and outcomes (maternal and perinatal).Main Results: We identified 33 studies reporting 385 pregnant women with COVID-19 infection: 368 (95.6%) mild; 14 (3.6%) severe; and 3 (0.8%) critical. Seventeen women were admitted to intensive care, including six who were mechanically ventilated and one maternal mortality. A total of 252 women gave birth, comprising 175 (69.4%) cesarean and 77 (30.6%) vaginal births. Outcomes for 256 newborns included four RT-PCR positive neonates, two stillbirths, and one neonatal death.Conclusion: COVID-19 infection during pregnancy probably has a clinical presentation and severity resembling that in non-pregnant adults. It is probably not associated with poor maternal or perinatal outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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