4.3 Article

Anaemia of Pregnancy, Perinatal Outcomes and Children's Developmental Vulnerability: a Whole-of-Population Study

Journal

PAEDIATRIC AND PERINATAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 381-390

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ppe.12149

Keywords

anaemia; pregnancy outcome; child development

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Partnership Grant [1056888]
  2. Australia Fellowship from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [570120]
  3. Australia Fellowship
  4. Department of Education

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BackgroundThere is limited longitudinal data from high-income countries on the sequelae of anaemia during pregnancy. The aim of this study is to examine whether anaemia of pregnancy is associated with adverse perinatal outcomes and with children's developmental vulnerability. MethodsWe conducted a population-based study to link routinely collected government administrative data that involved all live births in the state of South Australia 1999-2005 (n=124061) and a subset for whom developmental data were collected during a national census of children attending their first year of school in 2009 (n=13654). Perinatal outcomes were recorded by midwives using a validated, standardised form. Development was recorded by schoolteachers using the Australian Early Development Index (AEDI). Children in the lowest 10% of AEDI scores are indicative of developmental vulnerability. ResultsThere were 8764/124061 (7.1%) cases of anaemia. After adjustment for a range of potentially confounding factors, anaemia of pregnancy was associated with a higher risk of fetal distress [incident rate ratio (IRR) 1.20 [95% CI 1.13, 1.27]] and preterm birth <37 weeks gestation (IRR 1.23 [1.15, 1.31]), slightly higher birthweight [14g (2, 26)] and newborns were less likely to require resuscitation (IRR 0.94 [0.91, 0.097]). Anaemia of pregnancy was not associated with children's developmental vulnerability after adjustment for maternal, obstetric and sociodemographic covariables, either in complete case analyses (n=11949) or after imputation for missing data (n=13654). ConclusionsAnaemia of pregnancy is associated with perinatal complications but not with children's developmental vulnerability at school entry.

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