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Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker

Oxford Handbook of Midwifery (27 page)

BOOK: Oxford Handbook of Midwifery
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  • Blood samples are taken within one hour of delivery from the
    Rh-negative mother to test for maternal antibodies, and fetal cells (Kleihauer’s).
  • Also from the neonate, to discover its blood group and Rh factor. If the neonate is Rh-negative, then the mother requires no further anti-D Ig.
    It is the midwife’s responsibility to carry out tests during pregnancy to identify women who require anti-D prophylaxis. A full explanation should be given to the woman and her consent obtained for any tests or administration of anti-D Ig.
    1
    National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (2008). Routine antenatal anti-D prophy- laxis for women who are rhesus D negative. Technical appraisal 156. London: NICE. Available at: M
    www.nice.org.uk/ta156.
    CHAPTER 4
    Antenatal care
    64‌‌
    Screening for Down’s syndrome risk
    The incidence of Down’s syndrome is approximately 1:600–1:700 across the age range of the childbearing population. There are variations in inci- dence according to maternal age:
    • At 18 years of age the incidence is 1:2300
    • At 35 years it is 1:200–350
    • At 40 years it is 1:100
    • At 45 years it is 1:45.
      Taking age as the only risk factor would mean that <30% of affected fetuses would be detected by diagnostic testing, as it would not be appropriate to offer amniocentesis to all women.
      Down’s risk screening was developed in the 1980s to enable all pregnant women to be given an estimate of individual risk if they choose to be screened. The risk is calculated by examining a combination of the following factors:
    • Maternal age
    • Gestational age in completed weeks

      Maternal body weight
    • Serum screening.
      Maternal serum screening
    • This enables examination of a combination of hormones and proteins present in the maternal bloodstream during early pregnancy.
    • Levels vary according to fetal gestational age.
    • Abnormally low or high levels are linked to genetic, chromosomal, and structural abnormalities of the fetus.
    • High levels of A-fetoprotein (AFP) are associated with neural tube defects, and low levels with Down’s syndrome.
    • Neural tube defects can be confirmed by ultrasound scan and also amniocentesis.
      Recommended screening: aims
    • Screening for Down’s syndrome should be performed by the end of the first trimester (13 weeks 6 days), but provision should be made to allow later screening (which could be as late as 20 weeks 0 days) for women booking later in pregnancy.
    • The ‘combined test’ (nuchal translucency, B-hCG, pregnancy- associated plasma protein-A) should be offered to screen for Down’s syndrome between 11 weeks 0 days and 13 weeks 6 days.
    • For women who book later in pregnancy the most clinically and cost- effective serum screening test (triple or quadruple test) should be offered between 15 weeks 0 days and 20 weeks 0 days.
    • When it is not possible to measure nuchal translucency, owing to fetal position or high BMI, women should be offered serum screening (triple or quadruple test) between 15 weeks 0 days and 20 weeks 0 days.
    SCREENING FOR DOWN’S SYNDROME RISK
    65
    Sensitivity
  • The sensitivity of the test is a measurement of how many affected fetuses are detected. This means that around 5% of women having the test will be recalled for further investigation.
  • The false-positive rate is between 2.6% and 5%. This percent of women will be carrying a normal baby despite a high-risk screening result. About 60 women will be recalled for every affected baby diagnosed.
  • The false-negative rate is 20%. This percent of women will be carrying an affected baby despite a low-risk screening result.
    Results and consequences of screening
  • Offer diagnostic testing if a woman’s screen result is 1:10–1:210.
  • If the result is 1:210+, then advise the woman that her screen result is low risk.
  • Provide information about what the test involves, how the risk is calculated and what is meant by a risk factor.
  • There needs to be understanding that low risk is not ‘no risk’ and that any woman could be the ‘one’ of the 1:800.
  • Explain the nature of the diagnostic test and the risk of miscarriage
    from this test (1%).
  • Discuss options following diagnosis of Down’s syndrome, and provide non-directive support to the decision to choose termination or continuation of the pregnancy.
    Further reading
    National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (2008). Antenatal care: Routine care for the healthy pregnant mother. Clinical guideline 62. London: NICE. Available at: M www.nice.org. uk/cg62.
    CHAPTER 4
    Antenatal care
    66‌‌
    Group B haemolytic streptococcus
    Group B haemolytic streptococcus (GBS) is one of a number of common bacteria found in the gut of 30% of men and women. It is estimated that 25% of women carry this organism in the vaginal tract with no ill effect. Its significance is that it can be transmitted to the baby during delivery and is the most common cause of fatal bacterial infection in the early neonatal period.
    Incidence
    In the UK, approximately 1:2000 babies annually acquire GBS infection, pre- senting with septicaemia, pneumonia, or meningitis. A UK survey in 2001 identified 376 cases of early-onset GBS disease, 39 of which were fatal.
    Presentation
    There are two ways in which the infection will present:
    • 90% of the infections are early onset, and 70% of babies are symptomatic at birth

      10% are late onset, occurring after 48h and up to 3 months after birth.
      Screening
      There is little organized antenatal screening for GBS carriage in the UK at present and most maternity units rely on risk factor estimation to iden- tify carriers and situations where the infection may be transmitted to the neonate.
      Risk factors
    • Previous baby affected by GBS.
    • GBS bacteriuria detected in the present pregnancy.
    • Pre-term labour.
    • Prolonged rupture of the membranes.
    • Pyrexia during labour.
      Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP) is offered to women who have any of these risk factors. This approach differs from that in the USA, where all pregnant women are offered bacteriological screening at 35–37 weeks’ gestation. This involves taking vaginal and rectal swabs, and all women who carry GBS are offered IAP. This results in 27% of all pregnant women being offered IAP during labour and a reduction in early onset GBS disease of 86%.
      Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology recommendations
      The Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (RCOG)
      1
      has made the following recommendations in the absence of clinical trials and recent data on the prevalence of GBS carriage in the UK.
    • Routine antenatal screening is not recommended.
    • Antenatal treatment with penicillin is not recommended if GBS is detected incidentally.
    • IAP should be considered if GBS is detected incidentally.
    • There is no good evidence to support IAP in women who carried GBS in a previous pregnancy.
    • IAP should be offered to women who had a previous baby with GBS disease.
      GROUP B HAEMOLYTIC STREPTOCOCCUS
      67
  • The argument for IAP is stronger in the presence of two or more risk factors.
  • IAP should be offered, after discussion, to women with GBS bacteriuria.
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis is not required for women undergoing elective caesarean section in the absence of labour and with intact membranes.
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis is unnecessary for women with pre-term rupture of membranes unless they are in established labour.
  • Penicillin should be administered as soon as possible after the onset of labour. Clindamycin should be given in the event of penicillin allergy.
    1
    Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (2007).
    Preventing Group B Streptococcus Infection in Newborn Babies
    . London: RCOG.
    CHAPTER 4
    Antenatal care
    68‌‌
    Sickle cell anaemia
    Haemoglobin is a complex molecule with the ability to absorb oxygen easily and reversibly. The molecule is composed of iron and protein. The protein structure is inherited and is the part affected in haemoglobino- pathies, being either abnormal or partly missing.
    A normal red blood cell (RBC) in an adult is filled with adult haemoglobin. Everyone inherits their haemoglobin type from their parents, half the responsible gene copies from each, and the usual type is HbAA.
    Sickle cell trait
    • Sickle haemoglobin (abbreviated HbS) has an abnormality of the protein part of the molecule.
    • An individual inheriting HbS from one parent and HbA from the other will have haemoglobin type HbSA.
    • This is known as the sickle-cell trait.
    • The RBCs of such individuals will function normally and they will have few, if any, symptoms.

      However, these individuals have a 50% chance of passing this type of haemoglobin on to their children.
    • This condition confers immunity from the malaria parasite, which explains the prevalence of the condition in areas where malaria infection is endemic.
    • Due to population movement, individuals can inherit this type of haemoglobin even if their ancestry is from malaria-free areas.
      Sickle cell anaemia
    • In this case, the individual inherits HbS from both parents, so the haemoglobin type is HbSS.
    • RBCs containing only HbSS react to hypoxia, acidosis, or dehydration by changing shape, from the usual bi-concave disc to a crescent or sickle shape.
    • These RBCs are more fragile, easily damaged, and will clump together, blocking capillaries.
    • Painful crises are provoked by the blockage of small blood vessels.
    • The overall effect is that the RBCs are haemolysed, rapidly causing chronic haemolytic anaemia.
      Effects on childbearing
    • Subfertility
    • Impaired placental function
    • Increased risk of pregnancy-induced hypertension
    • Pulmonary and renal problems
    • Phlebitis
    • Women with this type of anaemia need to be well hydrated during labour and need careful monitoring to avoid hypoxia should an anaesthetic be required.
    SICKLE CELL ANAEMIA
    69
    Screening
  • Information about screening for sickle cell diseases and thalassaemias, including carrier status and the implications of these, should be given to pregnant women at the first contact with a healthcare professional.
  • Screening for sickle cell diseases and thalassaemias should be offered to all women as early as possible in pregnancy (ideally by 10 weeks). The type of screening depends upon the prevalence and can be carried out in either primary or secondary care.
    Further reading
    National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (2008). Antenatal care: Routine care for the healthy pregnant mother. Clinical guideline 62. London: NICE. Available at: M www.nice.org. uk/cg62.
    CHAPTER 4
    Antenatal care
    70‌‌
    Thalassaemia
    In this recessively inherited condition part of the haemoglobin protein is missing. The protein is made from structures called A and B chains. As several genes are responsible for the structure of these chains, it is pos- sible to have varying degrees of the condition.
    B
    -thalassaemia minor
    The individual inherits one normal gene from one parent and one affected gene from the other parent. This is a carrier state, and has little effect on health other than mild anaemia. Affected individuals can pass on the defective gene to their children.
    B
    -thalassaemia major
    The individual inherits defective genes from both parents and can make no, or very few, B chains, so does not produce sufficient haemoglobin. This results in severe anaemia requiring regular blood transfusions and therapy to remove excess iron from the blood.
    A
    -thalassaemia
    People with normal haemoglobin carry four A globin genes, two from each parent. A-thalassaemia results from the deletion of one or more of these genes. Table 4.2 shows the result of deletions of one or more of the genes and the effect on the type of haemoglobin produced.
    Table 4.2
    Effect of gene deletions
    Gene deletions
    Diagnosis
    Adult blood
    (
    aa/

    a
    )

    2
    thalassaemia
    Normal
    (
    aa/
    – –) or (
    a

    /a
    –)

    1
    thalassaemia
    Small red blood cells
    (–
    a/
    – –)
    Hb H disease
    Moderate anaemia
    (– –/– –)
    Hydrops fetalis
    Not compatible with life
    Screening for thalassaemia
    • As with sickle cell anaemia, antenatal screening should be offered to all pregnant women as recommended.
      1
    • A routine FBC will identify women with hypochromic, microcytic anaemia. Haemoglobin electrophoresis will then identify the underlying haemoglobinopathy.
    • Knowing the carrier state of each parent allows counselling about the risks to the fetus of being a carrier or having the disease.
    • Haemoglobinopathy screening is carried out on newborns as part of the neonatal blood spot test.
      THALASSAEMIA
      71
      Impact of maternal thalassaemia major on pregnancy
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