OBJECTIVE: To compare the incidence of antenatal and intrapartum complications and perinatal outcomes among women who had delivered five or more times (grandmultiparous) with those of age-matched controls who had delivered two to four times (multiparous). DESIGN: A case-control study. SETTING: A tertiary referral hospital in Aba, Nigeria. SAMPLE: Seven hundred and thirty-four grandmultiparous women were compared with 734 age-matched multiparous controls. METHODS: Maternal case records were retrieved from medical records department and analyzed with additional information obtained from the labor ward records. Statistical analysis was done using EPI info version 6; χ² test was used to analyze categorical variables. RESULTS: Grandmultiparity was associated with a significantly higher risk of antenatal anemia (P < 0.05), multiple pregnancy (P < 0.01), fetal macrosomia (P < 0.01), perinatal mortality (P < 0.01), and primary postpartum hemorrhage (P < 0.05). A significantly higher rate of cesarean deliveries was observed in the multiparous controls (P < 0.01), than the grandmultiparous women. CONCLUSION: Our study shows that there is an increased risk of antenatal anemia, multiple pregnancy, primary postpartum hemorrhage, and adverse perinatal outcomes in grandmultiparous women independent of maternal age.
OBJECTIVE: To compare the incidence of antenatal and intrapartum complications and perinatal outcomes among women who had delivered five or more times (grandmultiparous) with those of age-matched controls who had delivered two to four times (multiparous). DESIGN: A case-control study. SETTING: A tertiary referral hospital in Aba, Nigeria. SAMPLE: Seven hundred and thirty-four grandmultiparous women were compared with 734 age-matched multiparous controls. METHODS: Maternal case records were retrieved from medical records department and analyzed with additional information obtained from the labor ward records. Statistical analysis was done using EPI info version 6; χ² test was used to analyze categorical variables. RESULTS: Grandmultiparity was associated with a significantly higher risk of antenatal anemia (P < 0.05), multiple pregnancy (P < 0.01), fetal macrosomia (P < 0.01), perinatal mortality (P < 0.01), and primary postpartum hemorrhage (P < 0.05). A significantly higher rate of cesarean deliveries was observed in the multiparous controls (P < 0.01), than the grandmultiparous women. CONCLUSION: Our study shows that there is an increased risk of antenatal anemia, multiple pregnancy, primary postpartum hemorrhage, and adverse perinatal outcomes in grandmultiparous women independent of maternal age.