Pregnancy-associated arterial dissections occurred in 0.005% of hospitalizations, most frequently postpartum, and carried a 3.7% in-hospital mortality versus <0.001% in those without dissection.
Cohort (n=18,151,897)
Yes
Pregnancy-associated arterial dissections are rare (5.5 per 100,000) but carry a high mortality risk, most frequently occur in the postpartum period, and most commonly involve the coronary arteries.
AIMS: Pregnancy is a known risk factor for arterial dissection, which can result in significant morbidity and mortality in the peripartum period. However, little is known about the risk factors, timing, distribution, and outcomes of arterial dissections associated with pregnancy. METHODS AND RESULTS: We included all women ≥12 years of age with hospitalizations associated with pregnancy and/or delivery in the Nationwide Readmissions Database between 2010 and 2015. The primary outcome was any dissection during pregnancy, delivery, or the postpartum period (42-days post-delivery). Secondary outcomes included timing of dissection, location of dissection, and in-hospital mortality. Among 18 151 897 pregnant patients, 993 (0.005%) patients were diagnosed with a pregnancy-related dissection. Risk factors included older age (32.8 vs. 28.0 years), multiple gestation (3.6% vs. 1.9%), gestational diabetes (14.3% vs. 0.2%), gestational hypertension (6.0% vs. 0.6%), and pre-eclampsia/eclampsia (2.7% vs. 0.4%), in addition to traditional cardiovascular risk factors. Of the 993 patients with dissection, 150 (15.1%) dissections occurred in the antepartum period, 232 (23.4%) were diagnosed during the admission for delivery, and 611 (61.5%) were diagnosed in the postpartum period. The most common locations for dissections were coronary (38.2%), vertebral (22.9%), aortic (19.8%), and carotid (19.5%). In-hospital mortality was 3.7% among pregnant patients with a dissection vs. <0.001% in patients without a dissection. Deaths were isolated to patients with an aortic (8.6%), coronary (4.2%), or supra-aortic (<2.5%) dissection. CONCLUSION: Arterial dissections occurred in 5.5/100 000 hospitalized pregnant or postpartum women, most frequently in the postpartum period, and were associated with high mortality risk. The coronary arteries were most commonly involved. Pregnancy-related dissections were associated with traditional risk factors, as well as pregnancy-specific conditions.
“We always need to remember that these kinds of catastrophic complications can occur. Even though they're rare, we don't want to miss them.”
Beyer et al. (Thu,) conducted a cohort in Pregnancy-associated arterial dissections (n=18,151,897). Pregnancy was evaluated on Any dissection during pregnancy, delivery, or the postpartum period (42-days post-delivery). Pregnancy-associated arterial dissections occurred in 0.005% of hospitalizations, most frequently postpartum, and carried a 3.7% in-hospital mortality versus <0.001% in those without dissection.
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