BMJ Open (Oct 2021)

Relationship between anaemia, coagulation parameters during pregnancy and postpartum haemorrhage at childbirth: a prospective cohort study

  • Marian Knight,
  • Saswati Sanyal Choudhury,
  • Anjali Rani,
  • Manisha Nair,
  • Jennifer J Kurinczuk,
  • Pramod Kumar,
  • Farzana Zahir,
  • Maria Quigley,
  • Charles Opondo,
  • Simon Stanworth,
  • Michael Laffan,
  • Jane Armitage,
  • Anil Arora,
  • Swapna D Kakoty,
  • Colin Baigent,
  • Shakuntala Chhabra,
  • Dipika Deka,
  • Gitanjali Deka,
  • Pranabika Mahanta,
  • Robin Medhi,
  • Seeresha Rao,
  • Indrani Roy,
  • Carolin Solomi V,
  • Ratna Kanta Talukdar,
  • Nimmi Kansal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-050815
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10

Abstract

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Objectives To investigate the association between coagulation parameters and severity of anaemia (moderate anaemia: haemoglobin (Hb) 7–9.9 g/dL and severe anaemia: Hb <7 g/dL) during pregnancy and relate these to postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) at childbirth.Design A prospective cohort study of pregnant women recruited in the third trimester and followed-up after childbirth.Setting Ten hospitals across four states in India.Participants 1342 pregnant women.Intervention Not applicable.Methods Hb and coagulation parameters: fibrinogen, D-dimer, D-dimer/fibrinogen ratio, platelets and international normalised ratio (INR) were measured at baseline. Participants were followed-up to measure blood loss within 2 hours after childbirth and PPH was defined based on blood loss and clinical assessment. Associations between coagulation parameters, Hb, anaemia and PPH were examined using multivariable logistic regression models.Outcomes measures Adjusted OR with 95% CI.Results In women with severe anaemia during the third trimester, the D-dimer was 27% higher, mean fibrinogen 117 mg/dL lower, D-dimer/fibrinogen ratio 69% higher and INR 12% higher compared with women with no/mild anaemia. Mean platelets in severe anaemia was 37.8×109/L lower compared with women with moderate anaemia. Similar relationships with smaller effect sizes were identified for women with moderate anaemia compared with women with no/mild anaemia. Low Hb and high INR at third trimester of pregnancy independently increased the odds of PPH at childbirth, but the other coagulation parameters were not found to be significantly associated with PPH.Conclusion Altered blood coagulation profile in pregnant women with severe anaemia could be a risk factor for PPH and requires further evaluation.