Reproduction and Fertility (Jan 2022)

Q fever and early pregnancy failure: a Scottish case–control study

  • Nick Wheelhouse,
  • Sadie Kemp,
  • Jo E B Halliday,
  • Efstathios Alexandros Tingas,
  • W Colin Duncan,
  • Andrew W Horne

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1530/RAF-21-0072
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. L1 – L2

Abstract

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Q fever is a bacterial disease that passes between animals and humans and causes disease in both. The disease has been associated with pregnancy complications including miscarriage. This study was undertaken to identify if Q fever exposure was correlated with miscarriage in 369 women attending a pregnancy support unit in Edinburgh. The women in the study were in two groups, the miscarriage group with 251 women who had experienced a miscarriage and a control group of 118 women who had not experienced miscarriage. Three women were found to be positive for Q fever antibodies, suggesting that they had previously been exposed to the infection and all of them were from the group who had experienced miscarriage. The study indicates that Q fever is relatively rare in women attending an urban Scottish hospital suggesting that the infection is not a major cause of miscarriage in this population. However, as Q fever antibodies could only be found in women within the miscarriage group, it suggests that the infection cannot be ruled out as a potential cause of miscarriage in individual cases.