David A. Schwartz(Consultative and Diagnostic Center), Elyzabeth Avvad Portari(Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Pavel Babál(Comenius University Bratislava), Marcella Baldewijns(KU Leuven), Marie Blomberg(Linköping University), Amine Bouachba(Société de Réanimation de Langue Française), Jessica Camacho(Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari), Sophie Collardeau‐Frachon(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Arthur Colson(UCLouvain), Isabelle Dehaene(Ghent University Hospital), Joan Carles Ferreres(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), Brendan Fitzgerald(Cork University Hospital), Marta Garrido‐Pontnou(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), Hazem Gergis(Doncaster and Bassetlaw Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Beáta Hargitai(Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Foundation Trust), Addy Cecilia Helguera‐Repetto(Instituto Nacional de Perinatología), Sandra Holmström(Varberg Hospital), Claudine Irles(Instituto Nacional de Perinatología), Åsa Leijonhfvud(Helsingborgs lasarett), Sasha Libbrecht(Antwerp University Hospital), Tamás Marton(Birmingham Women's Hospital), Noel McEntagart(Rotunda Hospital), James T. Molina(Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina), Raffaella Morotti(Yale University), Alfons Nadal(Consorci Institut D'Investigacions Biomediques August Pi I Sunyer), Alexandra Navarro(Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari), Maria Nelander(Uppsala University), Angélica Oviedo(New Mexico State University), Andre Ricardo Oyamada Otani(Fertility Medical Group), Nikos Papadogiannakis(Karolinska University Hospital), Astrid Petersen(Aalborg University Hospital), Drucilla J. Roberts(Massachusetts General Hospital), Ali G. Saad(Jackson Health System), Anna Sand(Karolinska University Hospital), Sam Schoenmakers(Erasmus MC), Jennifer K. Sehn(University of Missouri–St. Louis), Preston R. Simpson(St. Elizabeth Hospital in Enumclaw), Kristen Thomas(Bellevue Hospital Center), María Yolotzín Valdespino-Vázquez(Instituto Nacional de Perinatología), Lotte E. van der Meeren(Leiden University Medical Center), Jo Van Dorpe(Ghent University Hospital), Robert M. Verdijk(Erasmus MC), Jaclyn C. Watkins(Massachusetts General Hospital), Mehreen Zaigham(Lund University)
Institutional Repository University of Antwerp (University of Antwerp)
June 1, 2022
Cited by 193Open Access
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Abstract

CONTEXT.—: Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. OBJECTIVE.—: To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). DESIGN.—: Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. RESULTS.—: Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. CONCLUSIONS.—: The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths.


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