1990-07-07
Spontaneous abortion rate and advanced maternal age: Consequences for prenatal diagnosis
Publication
Publication
The Lancet , Volume 336 - Issue 8706 p. 27- 29
Abstract
Maternal age related and procedure-related fetal abortion rates were studied in 384 women aged 36 and over scheduled for transabdominal chorionic villus sampling (TA-CVS) at 12-14 weeks of gestation. The pre-TA-CVS abortion rate within 30 days of intake (at 6-10 weeks of gestation) rose from 1·9% at age 35-36 years to 10·9% at 40 years and older. Women entering in the 6th week of gestation had a greater probability of aborting before TA-CVS than women entering after day 48. 26 women aborted spontaneously before TA-CVS, the majority of abortions occuring at 10-12 weeks. TA-CVS was done in 346 women. 11 pregnancies were terminated because of genetic anomalies, and 8 women had spontaneous fetal loss. These findings justify delaying prenatal diagnosis in older pregnant women until 12 weeks of gestation.
Additional Metadata | |
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doi.org/10.1016/0140-6736(90)91528-I, hdl.handle.net/1765/60408 | |
The Lancet | |
Organisation | Department of Gynaecology & Obstetrics |
Cohen-Overbeek, T., Hop, W., Den Ouden, M. E. M., Pijpers, L., Jahoda, M., & Wladimiroff, J. (1990). Spontaneous abortion rate and advanced maternal age: Consequences for prenatal diagnosis. The Lancet, 336(8706), 27–29. doi:10.1016/0140-6736(90)91528-I |