1. Mode of delivery in chorioamnionitis: impact on neonatal and maternal outcomes
- Author
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Vanessa R. Kay, Isabella Liang, Jennifer Twiss, and Michelle Morais
- Subjects
Chorioamnionitis ,Vaginal delivery ,Cesarean delivery ,Early onset neonatal sepsis ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 - Abstract
Abstract Background The impact of mode of delivery in chorioamnionitis on neonatal outcomes is unclear. This retrospective cohort study compares the rate of early onset neonatal sepsis between vaginal delivery and cesarean section. Methods Singleton pregnancies at greater than 24 + 0 weeks gestation with live birth and clinically-diagnosed chorioamnionitis from January 1, 2019 to December 31, 2021 were included. Cases with multiple gestations, terminations or histological chorioamnionitis alone were excluded. Rates of early onset neonatal sepsis, select secondary neonatal outcomes and a composite outcome of maternal infectious morbidity were compared using propensity score weighting. Subgroup analysis was done by indication for cesarean section. Results After chart review, 378 cases were included with 197 delivering vaginally and 181 delivering via cesarean section. The groups differed on age, parity, hypertension, renal disease, gestational age, corticosteroid use, magnesium sulfate use, presence of meconium and percentage meeting Gibbs criteria before propensity score weighting. Rate of early onset neonatal sepsis was greater in the cesarean section group (13.8% versus 3.1%, adjusted risk difference 8.3% [3.5–13.1], p
- Published
- 2024
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