Egyptian Pediatric Association Gazette (Apr 2021)

COVID-19 during pregnancy should we really worry from vertical transmission or rather from fetal hypoxia and placental insufficiency? A systematic review

  • Antoine AbdelMassih,
  • Raghda Fouda,
  • Rana Essam,
  • Alhussein Negm,
  • Dalia Khalil,
  • Dalia Habib,
  • George Afdal,
  • Habiba-Allah Ismail,
  • Hadeer Aly,
  • Ibrahim Genedy,
  • Layla El Qadi,
  • Leena Makki,
  • Maha Shulqamy,
  • Maram Hanafy,
  • Marian AbdelMassih,
  • Marina Ibrahim,
  • Mohamed Ebaid,
  • Monica Ibrahim,
  • Nadine El-Husseiny,
  • Nirvana Ashraf,
  • Noura Shebl,
  • Rahma Menshawey,
  • Rama Darwish,
  • Rana ElShahawi,
  • Rana Ramadan,
  • Sadra Albala,
  • Salwa Imran,
  • Sama Ahmed,
  • Samer Khaldi,
  • Sara Abohashish,
  • Stavro Paulo,
  • Yasmin Omar,
  • Mourad Alfy Tadros

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s43054-021-00056-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 69, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background COVID-19 is the largest outbreak to strike humanity. The wide scale of fatalities and morbidities lead to a concurrent pandemic of uncertainty in scientific evidence. Conflicting evidences are released on daily basis about the neonatal outcomes of COVID-19-positive mothers. The aim of this study was to use the relevant case reports and series to determine the percentage of newborns who test positive for COVID-19 who are born to COVID-19-positive mothers. Secondary outcomes included examining laboratory abnormalities among COVID-19-positive neonates, and any depicted placental abnormalities in COVID-19-positive mothers. For this purpose, systematic review was performed on all studies reporting primary data on fetus-mother pairs with COVID-19. Data bases were searched for studies that met our inclusion and exclusion criteria. Results Final screening revealed 67 studies, from which the primary data of 1787 COVID-19 mothers were identified and had their pregnancy outcome analyzed. Only 2.8% of infants born to COVID-19-positive mothers tested positive, and this finding is identical to percentages reported in former Coronaviridae outbreaks, whereas 20% manifested with intrauterine hypoxia alongside placental abnormalities suggestive of heavy placental vaso-occlusive involvement. Conclusions These findings suggest that while vertical transmission is unlikely, there appears to be an underlying risk of placental insufficiency due to the prothrombotic tendency observed in COVID-19 infection. Guidelines for proper prophylactic anticoagulation in COVID-positive mothers need to be established.

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