Neonatal General
Neonatal General 5: COVID, Infections Diseases
Jessica Messier, MD, PhD (she/her/hers)
Pediatrics Resident
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Clinical chorioamnionitis (CC; maternal fever, maternal and fetal tachycardia, purulent amnionic fluid, and/or uterine tenderness) has a high specificity, but low sensitivity for predicting histologic placental inflammation (PI). In preterm infants, there is a well-known association between both CC, PI, and early onset sepsis (EOS). Less is known about the effect of both CC and PI on full term infants.
Our objective was to elucidate the relationship between CC, maternal and fetal PI, and EOS in full term neonates.
We performed a retrospective electronic medical record review of full term infants born to mothers with (+CC, N=184) and without (-CC, N=72) CC whose placentas were sent for pathology from 2/2021-12/2021 at Magee Women’s Hospital. PI was staged by Redline criteria. EOS was defined as bacterial isolation from cord and/or infant blood and antibiotic treatment for ≥7days. Data were analyzed (Minitab 18.1) using T-tests, Kruskal-Wallis, or Chi-square as appropriate.
+CC and -CC cohorts had similar mode of delivery, birth weight, and sex. There was a statistical, but not clinically relevant, difference in GA (med[Q1-Q2], +CC: 39.6wk [39.0-40.4] vs -CC 39.1 [38.3-39.7], p< .001). A diagnosis of +CC had a sensitivity of 68.4% and specificity of 85.6% for predicting any amount of PI. Placentas from +CC and -CC showed both maternal (90.2% vs 41.7%) and fetal (67% vs 11.1%) inflammation. Higher stages of maternal and fetal inflammation were found for +CC compared to -CC (Fig. 1, p< .001 & p< .001, respectively). All cases of EOS were from the +CC group. Furthermore, within the +CC group, infants with EOS had higher maternal and fetal inflammatory stages compared to those infants without sepsis (Fig. 2, p=0.03 & p=0.004, respectively).
Maternal and fetal inflammation are found in placentas of full term infants both with and without CC, but, as expected, the maternal and fetal inflammation is more severe in the +CC group. All infants with EOS were in the +CC group and showed the highest stage of both maternal and fetal inflammation. Given this finding, rapid histologic analysis might be useful in selecting which infants should be started on antibiotics.