Tororo General Hospital had approximately 5,210 deliveries from January 2014 to December 2014. There were 46 weeks of birth register data available for our study and approximately 90% was legible. Among these registers, there were 185 cases pregnancies with perinatal death and 354 control pregnancies. 24 of the included pregnancies were of twins, 19 of which were cases with loss of both twins in 7 (36.8%) and 12 with loss of one twin (63.2%). The distribution of perinatal deaths by type (i.e. macerated stillbirth, fresh stillbirth, or neonatal death) is shown in Figure 1. The calculated stillbirth rate was 26.3 per 1,000 total deliveries, and the neonatal death rate of 8.9 per 1,000 live deliveries.
Comparison between cases and control pregnancies of the variables analyzed is shown in Table 1. The mean age for women who experienced a perinatal loss was 1.4 years older than those who did not (p = 0.02). The following factors were associated with increased odds of perinatal death: prematurity, low birth weight, multiple gestation, breech presentation, antepartum hemorrhage, cesarean delivery and cord prolapse. Factors associated with decreased odds of perinatal death included having more than 3 prior births and presenting in spontaneous labor. There were no significant associations between perinatal death and nulliparity, HIV infection, preeclampsia, or prior cesarean. Multiple logistic regression demonstrated that the adjusted OR for all of the preceding significant associations remained statistically significant with the sole exception of antepartum hemorrhage.
Table 1 Maternal, pregnancy, fetal and neonatal characteristics of case and control pregnancies with statistically significant associations (p < 0.05) bolded
|
Control pregnancies
N = 3541
n (% ) or
Median (IQR)
|
Case pregnancies
N= 1851
n (% ) or
Median (IQR)
|
Adjusted OR (CI)
|
Maternal Age (years)
|
23 (19—29)
|
25 (20 – 30)
|
--
|
Nulliparity
|
132/344 (38.4%)
|
62/179 (34.6%)
|
1.1 (0.7 – 1.1)
|
More than 3 prior births
|
277/344 (80.5%)
|
116/179 (64.8%)
|
0.3 (0.2 – 0.7)
|
Prior cesarean
|
8/348 (2.3%)
|
4 (2.2%)
|
1.3 (0.4 – 4.7)
|
HIV
|
26/342 (7.6%)
|
9/176 (5.1%)
|
0.5 (0.2 – 1.2)
|
Twin pregnancy
|
5 (1.4%)
|
19 (10.3%)
|
4.0 (1.1 – 13.9)
|
Preeclampsia
|
2/343 (0.6%)
|
0/179 (0%)
|
--
|
Antepartum hemorrhage
|
4/343 (1.2%)
|
8/179 (4.5%)
|
3.2 (0.9 – 12.2)
|
Infection
|
7/343 (2.0%)
|
7/179 (3.9%)
|
2.5 (0.8 – 7.7)
|
Breech
|
2/348 (0.6%)
|
8 (4.3%)
|
7.0 (1.4 – 35.5)
|
Cord prolapse
|
0/343 (0%)
|
7/179 (3.9%)
|
--
|
Normal labor
|
317/343 (92.4%)
|
97/179 (54.2%)
|
0.1 (0.1—0.2)
|
Cesarean delivery
|
35/347 (10.0%)
|
46/182 (25.3%)
|
3.8 (2.3 – 6.4)
|
Prematurity
|
5/348 (1.4%)
|
40/179 (22.2%)
|
18.9 (7.2 -49.2)
|
Birth weight (kilograms, kg)3
|
3.1 (2.7—3.3)
|
2.8 (1.7 – 3.2)
|
--
|
Low birth weight (<2.5 kg)3
|
21/338 (3.7%)
|
56 (37.3%)
|
2.5 (1.1 – 5.3)
|
OR, odds ratio, CI, confidence interval, IQR Interquartile Range
1 Denominators noted in cells when distinct from control and case N secondary to missing data
2Adjusted for maternal age in years, nulliparity, twin pregnancy, and prematurity
3 Data was analyzed on the level of the fetus/neonate rather than pregnancy
To assess for temporal association of factors with perinatal death (i.e. preceding, during or after labor), macerated stillbirths, fresh stillbirths and neonatal deaths were each compared to control pregnancies as shown in Table 2. Only singleton pregnancies were included in this subgroup analysis given that some twin dyads had different types of perinatal death (e.g. twin A was a stillbirth; twin B was a neonatal demise). Breech presentation, prematurity, low birth weight and cord prolapse were significantly associated with increased odds of macerated stillbirths in contrast to the other categorical variables. All of these as well as antepartum hemorrhage and cesarean section were associated with increased odds of fresh stillbirth. Only prematurity, breech presentation, cesarean delivery, and cord prolapse were associated with increased odds of neonatal death with prematurity having the strongest association with neonatal death (aOR 36.2 compared to 18.1 for macerated stillbirth and 7.5 for fresh stillbirth).
Table 2 Adjusted odds ratios for subtypes of perinatal death by maternal, pregnancy, fetal and neonatal characteristics as compared to controls among all singleton pregnancies with statistically significant associations (p < 0.05) bolded
|
Macerated Stillbirths
N = 64
Adjusted OR (CI) 1
|
Fresh Stillbirths
N= 61
Adjusted OR (CI) 1
|
Neonatal Deaths
N= 41
Adjusted OR (CI) 1
|
More than 3 prior births
|
0.2 (0.1-0.5)
|
0.4 (0.1-0.9)
|
0.6 (0.2-2.0)
|
Antepartum hemorrhage
|
1.7 (0.2-12.5)
|
6.7 (1.6-28.8)
|
1.0 (0.1-19.9)
|
Breech
|
18.4 (6.3-54.1)
|
21.4 (2.2-204.5)
|
30.1 (2.5-373.2)
|
Cord prolapse
|
1.02
|
1.02
|
1.02
|
Normal labor
|
0.1 (0.0-0.2)
|
0.1 (0.1-0.22)
|
0.5 (0.2-1.4)
|
Cesarean delivery
|
0.8 (0.3-2.4)
|
6.5 (3.4-12.6)
|
2.5 (2.5-13.3)
|
Prematurity
|
18.1 (6.2-53.1)
|
7.5 (2.2-25.9)
|
36.2 (11.9-110.2)
|
Low birth weight (<2.5kg)3
|
6.8 (2.6-17.9)
|
1.3 (0.4-4.9)
|
1.6 (0.3-7.4)
|
OR, odds ratio, CI, confidence interval
1 Adjusted for maternal age in years, nulliparity, and prematurity
3 Predicts perinatal death subtype perfectly
3 Data was analyzed on the level of the fetus/neonate rather than pregnancy