High-Risk Pregnancies Rising in U.S.
Sunday, February 11, 2007
The Associated Press
High-Risk Pregnancies Rising in U.S.
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
High-risk pregnancies are on the rise in the United States and may be
more common now than at any other time since
modern obstetric care became available.
Why? More fortysomething moms are having
babies, and epidemics of diabetes, obesity and
high blood pressure are causing pregnancy and
birth complications.
But in this otherwise troubling trend is also
some good news: A small but growing number of
women are successfully having children despite
life-threatening conditions that once made a
safe pregnancy almost inconceivable.
Exact numbers are not available, but doctors
say that tens of thousands of organ transplant
recipients, breast cancer survivors, women with
heart defects, and even women with the AIDS
virus have decided to risk childbearing in the
last several years.
Not all of these stories have happy endings,
and many people worry that some of these women
will not live long enough to raise their
children, or that they will pass on their
medical problems.
But most results have been so surprisingly
good that they are overturning decades of gloomy
dogma about who is medically fit to have a
child.
"These people define a whole new era of
pregnancy for us," said Temple University's Dr.
Vincent Armenti, who runs a registry that tracks
births to transplant patients.
"We have to change our mindset about the
perfect pregnancy," he said. Women should be
given advice based on solid research "instead of
an emotional feeling that some people just
shouldn't have a baby."
No one knows precisely how many high-risk
pregnancies there are. It is a catchall term
that in the past has meant the mom is over 35 or
has a condition like high blood pressure that is
dangerous for her or her fetus. But as these
situations have become more common, even this
loose definition is changing.
Births to women 35 and older are soaring. And
many complications are becoming so routine that
nurse midwives can manage them instead of
sending women to high-risk care specialists.
Doctors around the country say they are treating
far more of these risky cases than they did a
decade ago.
"Patients are getting older, so by
definition, they're higher-risk. The diabetes
rate is going through the roof, so that's
high-risk. More people with high blood pressure
are getting pregnant. The list goes on and on,"
leaving fewer women considered low-risk, said
Dr. Jacques Moritz, director of gynecology at
Roosevelt Hospital in New York City.
Dr. Mary D'Alton, the Columbia University
Medical Center obstetrics chief who recently
delivered twins to a 59-year-old woman, has
replaced the term "high-risk" with a 1-to-10
scale.
Birth outcomes for older women and those with
medical problems "have been better than we would
expect," although complications are more common,
she said. For example, about half of organ
transplant recipients give birth prematurely,
although often by just a couple of weeks. "I
don't mean to paint a rosy picture, but I would
want to paint an optimistic picture," D'Alton
said.
Dr. Gabrielle Fish felt optimistic when she
decided to try pregnancy after her kidney
transplant. Fish, of Cherry Hill, N.J., was in
her mid-30s and had been stable on her
anti-rejection drugs for two years. After
researching pregnancies among transplant
patients — there have been more than 1,000 in
the last decade — she asked her doctors' advice.
"They pretty much encouraged me. They said,
'You're a healthy woman and you don't want to
wait till you're high-risk because of your
age,'" Fish said.
The result: a healthy daughter, Madelyn, now
6. Fish said she feels lucky to have her, but
would not try to have a second child.
Carla Taylor also feels lucky. A delivery
room nurse from New York, she was 42 when she
discovered she was pregnant after having artery
embolization to treat uterine fibroids. Such
women are advised not to try pregnancy because
the treatment plugs blood vessels that feed
fibroids, and that might keep a fetus from
growing properly.
Taylor had a healthy daughter, Bailey, now 6.
Moritz, the gynecology director who works with
Taylor at Roosevelt Hospital, said 16 of his
patients have unexpectedly had children after
the fibroid treatment and most have done well.
"Usually if they were able to get pregnant
after the embolization, it means that blood
supply to the uterus is pretty good," he said.
Doctors expect more of these cases as
embolization becomes a popular option to
hysterectomy for fibroids, which plague millions
of women.
Other reasons high-risk pregnancies are
increasing:
— Older moms. In 2005, there were more than
104,000 births in the United States to women
ages 40 through 44, and over 6,500 to women 45
and older. Advanced age raises the risk of birth
defects.
— Chronic health problems. Obesity among
women ages 18 to 44 rose from under 9 percent in
1990 to almost 22 percent in 2005.
Hospital admissions for diabetes or related
conditions among pregnant women and new mothers
rose from 175,655 in 1993 to 269,861 in 2004,
says the March of Dimes. Admissions for high
blood pressure rose from 260,222 to 403,271.
— Multiple births, often the result of
infertility treatment. In 2004, they made up
more than 3 percent of all live births, up from
about 2 percent in 1980. Such babies are more
likely to be born prematurely and to have health
problems.
— More cancer survivors. Hundreds of
thousands are in their prime childbearing years.
"Pregnancy raises enormous concerns for women
with a history of breast cancer because we know
that many breast cancers are hormonally driven,"
and high estrogen levels during pregnancy might
raise the risk of relapse, said Julia Rowland,
director of the National Cancer Institute's
Office of Cancer Survivorship. "They may also be
concerned that they may not be here for a
child."
— Better medical care. Women with congenital
heart defects used to die young. Those who lived
were urged not to get pregnant. Now many such
defects can be fixed, and children of women with
heart defects are having their own children.
— More drugs. Nearly two-thirds of women who
gave birth from 1996-2000 took a medication
during pregnancy, a large federally funded study
found. Of those, nearly 40 percent took a drug
whose safety in pregnancy is not established,
and nearly 5 percent took a drug potentially
risky to the fetus. More pregnant women have
taken new medicines for cancer, depression and
other problems. More than 30 registries now
track outcomes of pregnant women on various
drugs.
— Growing prevalence of HIV. Each year, about
6,000 to 7,000 HIV-infected American women give
birth. Such pregnancies have been controversial
because of the risk of spreading the virus to
their babies. But modern AIDS drugs are so
effective at protecting babies from the virus'
spread that more doctors are accepting these
women's choice to have children.
"I view HIV disease now as basically a
chronic illness," said Dr. Nancy Chescheir,
obstetrics chief at Vanderbilt Medical Center.
Despite several hundred births to infected moms
at Vanderbilt, "we haven't had an HIV
transmission in six years," she said.
D'Alton, the Columbia obstetrics chief,
agreed.
"I just feel that these are very personal
choices," she said. D'Alton sees her job as
giving good care and supporting those choices
"as much as possible."
———
On the Net:
Transplant pregnancy registry:
www.temple.edu/NTPR
Drug safety in pregnancy:
www.otispregnancy.org
Drug registries:
www.fda.gov/womens/registries.html
Birth defect prevention and older moms:
www.marchofdimes.com/pnhec/173_812.asp