, Elham Feizabad1
, Nesa Rajabpoor Nikoo1
, Fatemeh Rahimi Sharbaf1
, Maedeh Rahmanzadeh *2
|
Results: Totally 960 pregnant women (760 controls and 200 cases) participated in the study. The mean age of the subjects was 31.07±0.17 years old with a minimum age of 17 and a maximum age of 45. The averge age of case group women was 33.57±0.40 years and this was 30.41±0.18 years in control group.
This study indicated that maternal age (P<0.001) and the number of pregnancies in the case group are significantly (P<0.001) higher than the control group. Also, having a history of miscarriage (P<0.001), having a history of infertility (P<0.001), and having hypothyroidism (P=0.030) are significantly more common in the case group. The frequency of intrauterine growth failure (P=0.003) and neonatal hospitalization (P<0.001) were also significantly higher in the case group. Conclusion: Despite recent advances in the prenatal field, the accuracy of screening tests may still vary depending on maternal age and other existing characteristics. Hence, it seems considering the mother's background characteristics are important just the same as the screening test results. |
| Rights and permissions | |
|
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. |