Maternal anaemia during pregnancy is associated with an increase in the
risk of offspring congenital heart disease: a case-control study using
linked electronic health records in England
Abstract
Abstract Objective Assessment of whether maternal
anaemia in early pregnancy causes offspring congenital heart disease
(CHD) Design Matched case-control study Setting
January 1998 - October 2020, England Population Women with a
haemoglobin measurement in the first 100 days of pregnancy and a
CHD-diagnosed child Methods Data was extracted from the United
Kingdom Clinical Practice Research Datalink GOLD database. Cases were
2,776 women with a CHD-diagnosed child. These were compared to 13,880
matched controls, women without a CHD-diagnosed child. Anaemia was
classified as <110 g/l haemoglobin following the WHO definition.
A conditional logistic regression analysis was conducted, adjusted for
potential maternal demographic and health-related confounders.
Main Outcome Measures Offspring CHD diagnosed within 5 years of
birth Results 123 (4.4 %) cases and 388 (2.8%) controls had
anaemia. After adjusting for potential confounders, the odds of giving
birth to a CHD-diagnosed child was 47% higher among anaemic mothers
(adjusted OR 1.47, 95% CI 1.18,1.83, p<0.001).
Conclusions The observed association between maternal anaemia
in early pregnancy and increased risk of offspring CHD supports our
recent evidence in mice. Approximately two-thirds of anaemia cases
globally are due to iron deficiency. A clinical trial of
periconceptional iron supplementation might be a minimally invasive and
low-cost intervention for prevention of some CHD if iron deficiency
anaemia is proven to be a cause. Funding: British Heart
Foundation (FS/17/55/33100, FS/SBSRF/22/31022, RE/18/3/34214); the
Medical Research Council (MR/W029294/1); the National Institute for
Health and Care Research (NIHR00172). Keywords: Congenital
Heart Disease; Anaemia; Haemoglobin; Case-control studies; Risk Factor;
Clinical Practice Research Datalink