Young adolescents face different challenges in pregnancy compared with their older teenage peers and adults that are sometimes exacerbated by high rates of obesity, a new study by UT Southwestern researchers suggests. The findings, published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology MFM, could highlight at-risk populations for targeted prevention efforts.
“This study highlights the unique perinatal characteristics of a population that are not often studied in the U.S. – adolescents between the ages of 10 and 15. Knowledge of these patients’ characteristics and outcomes shows that we have opportunities to intervene to prevent pregnancy and make a real difference in their well-being,” said Anne M. Ambia, M.D., Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at UT Southwestern, who co-led the study with David B. Nelson, M.D., Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Division Chief of Maternal-Fetal Medicine at UT Southwestern. Dr. Nelson is also a Dedman Family Scholar in Clinical Care at UTSW.
“Only half of pregnant teenagers receive a high school diploma,” Dr. Ambia said, “and their offspring are more likely than those of older parents to become adolescent parents themselves and suffer from poverty. By developing interventions to address the factors that lead to pregnancy in adolescents and worse outcomes for these young parents and their babies, we can help break this pervasive cycle.”
Despite substantial efforts to reduce the rates of adolescent pregnancies in the U.S., they remain among the highest in the industrialized world, with about 3 in 10 American girls becoming pregnant before age 20. Most studies examining this issue have focused on 15- to 19-year-olds; far less is known about pregnancies in younger adolescents.
To learn more about this younger population, Drs. Ambia and Nelson, along with colleagues at UT Southwestern and Parkland Health, searched medical records for patients under age 35 who gave birth for the first time between January 2010 and May 2021 at Parkland Health, a safety net hospital that serves patients in Dallas and is UT Southwestern’s primary teaching facility. Of the 33,391 patients identified, 10,894 were adolescents under age 20, and 868 of them were 15 years old or younger at the time of delivery.
When the researchers compared characteristics and outcomes among the adults, older adolescents, and younger adolescents, they found stark differences.
The younger adolescents were more likely to be Hispanic or non-Hispanic Black females compared with the other age groups. They also accessed prenatal care starting at a later gestational age (at nearly 20 weeks, compared with nearly 17 weeks for older adolescents and nearly 16 weeks for adults) and visited prenatal health care providers significantly fewer times.
These young patients were more likely than the other two groups to have preterm births at less than 37 weeks as well as eclampsia, a dangerous condition in which high blood pressure results in seizures during or shortly after pregnancy. Babies born to the younger adolescents were also more likely to have common consequences of preterm birth, including low birth weights and higher rates of neonatal intensive care admissions.
Further examination of the data showed that young adolescents who were obese were more likely than adolescents without obesity to have preeclampsia (high blood pressure that sometimes precedes eclampsia) and cesarean deliveries.
Dr. Ambia said the study highlights multiple areas for identification of at-risk groups for prevention of pregnancy and improving early access to care that could improve outcomes for both the youngest pregnant adolescents and their babies. For example, the racial disparities for young adolescents highlighted in this study are consistent with findings from another UT Southwestern study nearly three decades ago – an ongoing social determinant of health that’s still ripe for improvement. She added that access to care for young adolescents also remains a challenge, exemplified by their later initiation into prenatal care and less frequent health care visits. The study also showed that young pregnant adolescents were more likely than the other groups to be residing in areas with disproportionately high levels of poverty and unemployment and lower average education. (MSM/Newswise)