Reproductive Health (Mar 2018)

Temporal trends of preterm birth in Shenzhen, China: a retrospective study

  • Changchang Li,
  • Zhijiang Liang,
  • Michael S. Bloom,
  • Qiong Wang,
  • Xiaoting Shen,
  • Huanhuan Zhang,
  • Suhan Wang,
  • Weiqing Chen,
  • Yan Lin,
  • Qingguo Zhao,
  • Cunrui Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-018-0477-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Preterm birth is the leading cause of child mortality under 5 years of age. Temporal trends in preterm birth rates are highly heterogeneous among countries and little information exists for China. To address this data gap, we investigated annual changes in preterm birth incidence rate and explored potential determinants of these changes in Shenzhen, China. Methods A total of 1.4 million live births, during 2003-2012, were included from the Shenzhen birth registry. Negative-binominal regression models were used to estimate the annual percent changes in incidence. To identify the potential determinants behind temporal trends, we estimated the contribution of each changing risk factor to changes in rate by calculating the difference in population-attributable risk fraction. Results Annual preterm birth incidence rates increased by 0.94% (95% CI 0.30%, 1.58%) overall, 3.60% (95% CI 2.73%, 4.48%) for medically induced, and 3.13% (95% CI 1.01%, 5.31%) for preterm premature rupture of membranes, but decreased by 2.34% (95% CI 1.62%, 3.06%) for spontaneous preterm labor. Higher maternal educational attainment (0.20 rate increase), lower proportion of inadequate prenatal care (0.15 rate reduction), more multipara (0.08 rate reduction), decreased proportion of preeclampsia or eclampsia (0.05 rate reduction), and larger proportion of young and older pregnant women (0.04 rate increase) were significant contributors to the overall change over time. Contributions of changing risk factors were different between preterm birth subtypes. Conclusions Preterm birth rate in Shenzhen, China increased overall during 2003-2012, although trends varied across three preterm birth subtypes. The rising rates were associated with changes in maternal education and age.

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