Objective: To evaluate the risk of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) associated with intrauterine infection.
Material and methods: A retrospective cohort study of pregnancies complicated by PPH performed at a tertiary academic center in France from 2017 through 2021. Patients giving birth after 22 weeks of gestation with PPH were eligible. Patients with a PPH associated with an intrauterine infection were compared to patients with a PPH without intrauterine infection. Intrauterine infection was defined by a composite criterion available at delivery. DIC was defined by a specific pregnancy DIC score. The association between DIC and intrauterine infection was assessed by logistic regression. The causal effect of intrauterine infection on DIC was estimated by mediation analysis.
Results: Of 2,093 patients with PPH, 49 exposed to a clinical intrauterine infection were compared to 49 unexposed patients. The rate of DIC was higher in patients with than without infection (22 (45.8%) vs. 7 (14.6%), P = .001), and coagulation anomalies occurred sooner in patients with than without infection (7, 2-11 h vs. 14, 9-19 h, P < .001). In the multivariate analysis, intrauterine infection was the only factor independently associated with DIC (adjusted odds ratio 5.01, 95% CI 1.83-13.73). Mediation analysis showed that 14% (95% CI, 0-50%) of this association between intrauterine infection and DIC was mediated by severe PPH, and 86% resulted from the direct effect of intrauterine infection on DIC.
Conclusion: In PPH, intrauterine infection had a major direct effect on the occurrence, timing, and severity of DIC.
Keywords: Disseminated intravascular coagulation; Intrauterine infection; Postpartum hemorrhage.
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