| Literature DB >> 35844352 |
Marvi V Maheshwari1, Nabeeha Khalid2, Pragnesh D Patel3, Rahmah Alghareeb4, Afshan Hussain5.
Abstract
Adolescent pregnancy is the pregnancy of girls aged 10-19 years, leading to many maternal and neonatal adverse effects. These pregnancies have been a global concern for many decades and yet are still prevailing. This article has reviewed the significant determinants of adolescent pregnancy and various maternal adverse effects, including preeclampsia, preterm premature rupture of the membrane (PPROM), maternal anemia, sexually transmitted diseases, postpartum depression, and maternal deaths, and adverse neonatal outcomes, including low birth weight (LBW), prematurity, stillbirths, early neonatal demise, and low Apgar score. Various pathophysiologic events that lead to such adverse consequences have been briefly discussed in the article and how such occurrences can be overcome. This article has also emphasized the need to implement various modalities such as sex education, availability of contraceptives, and bringing community-level awareness to lower the prevalence of adolescent pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent motherhood; adolescent pregnancy; adverse pregnancy outcomes; fetal-maternal mortality; low-birth-weight infants; maternal outcomes; neonatal outcomes; pregnancy in adolescence; prematurity; teenage pregnancy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35844352 PMCID: PMC9282583 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.25921
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes of adolescent pregnancy
Image credits: Marvi Maheshwari
Major determinants for adolescent pregnancy
| Determinants |
| Marriage/stable relationship |
| Older-aged partner |
| Lack of sex education and family planning |
| Lower education status |
| Depression and low self-esteem |
| Poverty |
| Substance abuse |
| Peer pressure |
| Child of an adolescent mother |
| Single-parent household |
| Absence of both parents |
Summary of the studies included for the determinants of adolescent pregnancy
| Reference | Type of study | Population selected for the study | Time frame of the study | Region | Conclusion |
| Akanbi et al. [ | 8,448 teenage females of age 15-18 years | 2018 | Nigeria | The determinants of pregnancy involve living with a significant other, having no education, fewer health checkups in one year, knowledge of family planning, 18-19 years of age group, living in a village, and poverty. | |
| Beyene et al. [ | Facility-based quantitative cross-sectional study | 783 randomly selected teenage females | January to April 2014 (four months) | Assosa General Hospital, Ethiopia | Educational attainment, age, marital status, work status, household earnings, and the use of various contraception methods were the major determinants of teenage pregnancy. It was also noted that open-ended communications with parents, health checkups at school, and allowing young women to work acted as protective factors for preventing teenage pregnancy. |
Summary of all the included studies related to adverse maternal outcomes of adolescent pregnancy
| Reference | Type of study | Population selected for the study | Time frame of the study | Region | Conclusion |
| Macedo et al. [ | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 291,241 adolescents | 50 years (1969-2019) | 30 countries | The overall prevalence of preeclampsia/eclampsia was 6.7%, which was highly dependent on the sociodemographic status of the adolescent female. |
| Marković et al. [ | Prospective study | 300 pregnant women of age 13-35 (150 women of age 13-19 and 150 women of age 20-35) | Four years (2011-2014) | University Clinical Center Tuzla, Clinic for Gynecology and Obstetrics | Adolescent females had significantly high preterm premature rupture of membranes. It was also noted that premature rupture of membranes at term deliveries was also high among adolescent females. |
| Pinho-Pompeu et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | Pregnant women of age 10-19 years | Nine years (2005-2013) | University of Campinas (UniCamp), Brazil | The prevalence of anemia in women was very high in adolescent women, with a greater number of women with mild anemia as compared to moderate and severe anemia. |
| Medhi et al. [ | Prospective case-control study | 165 adolescent primigravid (15-19 years) who had completed 28 weeks of gestation with a singleton pregnancy who delivered in that institution and 330 adult primigravid (20-25 years) who delivered next to the adolescent female | One year (2014) | Northeast India | Adolescent women were more likely to have preeclampsia as compared to adult women. |
| Asavapiriyanont et al. [ | 121 pregnant teenage females | Eight months (October 2006 to May 2007) | Rajavithi Hospital, Bangkok | More than one-fourth of the pregnant females had STIs, including chlamydia, gonorrhea, hepatitis B, trichomoniasis, herpes simplex virus, and condyloma acuminata with the highest number of cases belonging to chlamydia. | |
| Conde-Agudelo et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | 854,377 Latin American women younger than 25 years | 18 years (1985-2003) | Latin America | Adolescents aged 15 or under were at greater risk of maternal and early neonatal mortality. |
Summary of all the studies included for adverse neonatal outcomes in adolescent pregnancy
| Reference | Type of study | Population selected for the study | Time frame of the study | Region | Conclusion |
| Zhang et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | 238,593 women subdivided into the adolescent group (10-19) and the adult group (20-34) | Four years (2013-2017) | Hebei, China | Adolescent women had a higher risk of stillbirth and neonatal death as compared to the adult group. |
| Vale de Almeida et al. [ | 23,894 postpartum women and their newborn infants | Two years (2011-2012) | Brazil | Younger adolescents had the highest risk of spontaneous prematurity compared to older adolescents. | |
| Ogawa et al. [ | Multicenter cross-sectional study | 30,831 women under 25 years of age with a singleton pregnancy | Six years (2005-2011) | Japan | Low Apgar scores were significantly higher in adolescent mothers as compared to women aged 20-24 years. |
| Neal et al. [ | Adolescent mothers | 10 years (2005-2015) | 45 countries | The risk of neonatal mortality for maternal age under 16 years old was greater in all regions. Socioeconomic, health services, and demography did not play much of a role in reducing mortality. | |
| Marvin-Dowle et al. [ | Population-based cohort study | Primigravid women aged ≤19 years (n=640) and 20-34 years (n=3,951) as the reference group | Four years (2007-2010) | Bradford, Northern England | Extremely low birth weight was significantly higher in the adolescent group (≤19 years) compared with the reference group. It was also noted that very preterm and extremely preterm deliveries were also higher in the adolescent group. |
| Yadav et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study | 4,101 deliveries of teenage (15-19) and adult (20-29) pregnancies | One year (2005-2006) | Nepal | No significant difference was noted in low Apgar scores between the two groups. |