top of page

Background: Inter-pregnancy interval has been identified as a potentially modifiable risk factor to improve perinatal outcomes. We examined the WHO recommended interval of at least 24 months after a livebirth to next pregnancy, and its recommendation of waiting for at least 6 months after a pregnancy loss to improve subsequent pregnancy outcomes. We aimed to estimate the association between inter-pregnancy interval and perinatal mortality using the Demographic and Health Survey reproductive and contraceptive calendar. Methods: For this population-based analysis, we extracted data for pregnancies with gestational age and pregnancy outcomes from 113 publicly available Demographic and Health Surveys conducted between 2000 and 2022 in 46 countries that included a reproductive or contraceptive calendar module. The primary outcome was perinatal mortality (stillbirth and early neonatal death) while the inter-pregnancy interval was the exposure of interest, grouped into categories of less than 6 months, 6–11 months, 12–17 months, 18–23 months, and 24–59 months. The analysis was stratified by preceding pregnancy outcome (livebirths, stillbirths, or abortions). The Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazard model were used to calculate the cumulative probability of perinatal mortality and the hazard ratios (HRs). Findings: The analysis sample comprised of 692 402 pregnancies contributed by 570 145 women with a mean age of 28·4 years (SD 5·96). The overall HR of perinatal death was 2·72 (95% CI 2·52–2·93) times higher for an inter-pregnancy interval of less than 6 months compared with the WHO recommended optimal waiting time of 18–23 months following a livebirth. Overall HRs followed a context-related pattern, with the highest ratio of 2·95 (95% CI 2·67–3·25) in sub-Saharan Africa and the lowest of 1·98 (1·47–2·66) in north Africa, west Asia, and Europe. Inter-pregnancy intervals of less than 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months following stillbirth or abortion (spontaneous or induced) do not pose a higher risk for perinatal death in subsequent pregnancy. Interpretation: Our study reaffirms the WHO recommendation on optimal interval between the last livebirth and the next pregnancy of at least 24 months and avoiding pregnancy before 18 months. However, our analysis does not support the WHO recommendation of delaying the next pregnancy for at least 6 months after a pregnancy loss for improved perinatal survival. Funding: None. © 2023 World Health Organization

Abstract

Abortion, Spontaneous, Adult, Birth Intervals, Contraceptive Agents, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Live Birth, Perinatal Death, Perinatal Mortality, Pregnancy, Stillbirth, contraceptive agent, abortion, adult, Article, contraception, family planning, female, gestational age, hazard ratio, health survey, human, live birth, mortality, newborn death, outcome assessment, perinatal mortality, pregnancy, pregnancy interval, pregnancy outcome, risk factor, spontaneous abortion, stillbirth, World Health Organization, birth interval, newborn, perinatal death

Significance Statement:

The risk of perinatal mortality following short inter-pregnancy intervals—insights from 692 402 pregnancies in 113 Demographic and Health Surveys from 46 countries: a population-based analysis

Ali M.M., Bellizzi S., Shah I.H.

This study emphasizes the importance of optimal inter-pregnancy intervals in reducing perinatal mortality. Analyzing over 692,000 pregnancies, it found that intervals shorter than 6 months carry a 2.72 times higher risk of perinatal death compared to the recommended 18-23 months. Notably, the study challenges WHO's recommendation of a 6-month wait following pregnancy loss, suggesting no increased risk for perinatal death in such cases. These insights are crucial for global maternal and child health policies, particularly in regions with high perinatal mortality rates​​.

The Lancet Global Health

2023

bottom of page