Variation in relationships between maternal age at first birth and pregnancy outcomes by maternal race: a population-based cohort study in the United States

ObjectiveTo estimate absolute risks of obstetric outcomes in the USA according to maternal age at first birth from age 15 to 45 separately by maternal race.Design and settingPopulation-based cohort study.SettingVital statistics Birth Cohort-Linked Birth- Infant Death Data Files and Fetal Death Data...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ open 2019-12, Vol.9 (12), p.e033697-e033697
Hauptverfasser: Schummers, Laura, Hacker, Michele R, Williams, Paige L, Hutcheon, Jennifer A, Vanderweele, Tyler J, McElrath, Thomas F, Hernandez-Diaz, Sonia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ObjectiveTo estimate absolute risks of obstetric outcomes in the USA according to maternal age at first birth from age 15 to 45 separately by maternal race.Design and settingPopulation-based cohort study.SettingVital statistics Birth Cohort-Linked Birth- Infant Death Data Files and Fetal Death Data Files in the USA.Participants16 514 849 births to nulliparous women from 2004 to 2013.Outcome measuresWe estimated absolute risks of obstetric outcomes (multiple gestations, caesarean delivery, early and late preterm birth, small for gestational age birth, stillbirth, neonatal mortality, postneonatal infant mortality) at each year of maternal age from 15 to 45 years using logistic regression in the overall population and stratified by maternal race. We modelled maternal age flexibly to allow curvilinear shapes and plotted risk curves for each outcome.ResultsIn the overall population, multiple gestations, caesarean delivery and stillbirth risks were lowest at young maternal ages with linear or quadratic increases with age. Curves for preterm birth, small for gestational age, neonatal mortality and postneonatal mortality were u or j shaped, with nadirs between 20 and 29 years, and elevated risks at both younger and older maternal ages. In race-stratified analyses, the shapes of the curves were generally similar across races. Risks increased for all women for all outcomes after age 30. However, increased risks at young maternal ages were most pronounced for white and Asian/Pacific Islander women, for whom young childbearing was least common. Conversely, risks at older ages were more pronounced for Black and American Indian/Alaska Native women, for whom delayed childbearing was least common.ConclusionOur findings confirm risks associated with first births to women younger than 20 and older than 30 years, provide easily interpretable risk curves and illuminate variability in these relationships across categories of maternal race in the USA.
ISSN:2044-6055
2044-6055
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033697