Researchers examined data on more than 103,000 pregnancies among
more than 58,000 women with asthma who had babies in Ontario,
Canada, from 2003 to 2012.
Compared to women who didn't have asthma attacks during pregnancy,
those who did were 17% more likely to have pregnancy-induced
hypertension and 30% more likely to have dangerously high blood
pressure known as preeclampsia, the study found.
Women who had asthma attacks were also 14% more likely to have low-birthweight
or preterm babies and 21% more likely to have infants with birth
defects.
"Nearly 40% of pregnant women decrease or stop taking asthma
medication because they are worried that it could be harmful to
their unborn babies," senior study author Teresa To of the Hospital
for Sick Children in Toronto and the Children's Hospital of Eastern
Ontario Research Institute in Ottawa said in a statement.
"However, our study indicates that severe asthma symptoms present
the greater risk to mother and baby," To said.
While the study wasn't designed to prove whether or how asthma
attacks during pregnancy might cause complications for mothers or
babies, it's possible this happens because flare-ups reduce oxygen
supplies for both women and their developing infants, To said.
Asthma is the most common chronic disease encountered in pregnancy,
occurring in up to 13% of pregnancies, To and colleagues write in
the European Respiratory Journal.
About one in three pregnant women with asthma have exacerbations
during pregnancy, previous research has found. These exacerbations
have been previously linked to complications like high blood
pressure for mothers and early arrivals for babies, but much of the
research to date has compared women with and without asthma, making
it unclear how much uncontrolled asthma might play a role, the study
team notes.
For the current study, researchers followed women through pregnancy
then followed their babies for up to five years.
Asthma attacks during pregnancy were rare, even though all of the
study participants had asthma. A total of 2,663 women had asthma
attacks during a total of 4,455 pregnancies, the study found.
Pregnant women who had asthma attacks were more likely to be older,
and more likely to smoke or to have limited income or insecure
housing, the study found.
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Preeclampsia developed in 5.3% of pregnancies among women who did
have asthma attacks, and just 3.8% of pregnancies among other women
in the study.
In addition, women developed pregnancy-induced hypertension in 7% of
pregnancies involving asthma attacks, compared with 5.4% of other
pregnancies.
Low birth weights occurred in 6.8% of pregnancies with asthma
attacks, compared with 5.3% of other pregnancies, the study also
found. Similarly, preterm births occurred in 8.2% of pregnancies
involving asthma attacks compared with 6.7% of other pregnancies.
When women had asthma attacks during pregnancy, their children were
also more likely to experience allergies and respiratory infections
like pneumonia.
And, 6.2% of babies had birth defects in pregnancies involving
asthma attacks, compared with 5% of infants born to mothers who
didn't have asthma attacks during pregnancy.
Children were also 23% more likely to develop asthma in early
childhood when mothers had asthma attacks during pregnancy. These
children were also 12% more likely to have pneumonia during their
first five years of life.
Women were considered to have asthma attacks or severe asthma
exacerbations if they visited a doctor at least five times for
asthma problems during pregnancy or if they went to a hospital or
emergency room for asthma symptoms.
One limitation of the study is that this definition might not always
correctly identify women with uncontrolled symptoms, the study
authors note. Some women with five or more checkups for asthma
symptoms during pregnancy could in fact be controlling their illness
well.
Even so, the results underscore the importance of careful asthma
management during pregnancy, Professor Jorgen Vestbo, chair of the
European Respiratory Society's Advocacy Council and a researcher at
the University of Manchester in the UK, said in a statement.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2P7lzhD European Respiratory Journal, online
November 26, 2019.
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