Pregnancy and infant outcomes by trimester of SARS‐CoV ‐2 infection in pregnancy– SET‐NET , 22 jurisdictions, January 25, 2020–December 31, 2020
Birth Defects Research2022Vol. 115(2), pp. 145–159
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2022 papers
Varsha Neelam, Emily Reeves, Kate R. Woodworth, Emily O’Malley Olsen, Megan R. Reynolds, Joy Rende, Heather Wingate, Susan E. Manning, Paul A. Romitti, Kristen D. Ojo, Kristin Silcox, Jerusha Barton, Evan Mobley, Nicole D. Longcore, Ayomide Sokale, Mamie Lush, Camille Delgado‐López, Abdoulaye Diédhiou, Deborah Mbotha, Wanda Simon, Bethany Reynolds, Tahani Hamdan, Suzann Beauregard, Esther M. Ellis, Jennifer Y. Seo, Amanda Bennett, Sascha Ellington, Aron J. Hall, Eduardo Azziz‐Baumgartner, Van T. Tong, Suzanne M. Gilboa
Abstract
There were no signals for increased birth defects among infants in this population relative to national baseline estimates, regardless of timing of infection. However, the prevalence of preterm birth in people with SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnancy in our analysis was higher relative to national baseline data (10.0-10.2%), particularly among people with third trimester infection. Consequences of COVID-19 during pregnancy support recommended COVID-19 prevention strategies, including vaccination.
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