Women who conceive right after a miscarriage have healthy pregnancies

August 08, 2010 09:28 am | Updated November 15, 2016 06:33 am IST - London

Beatriz Lopez gestures during an interview with Associated Press at her home in Olmos, Argentina, south of Buenos Aires, Thursday, March 13, 2008. Lopez, 32, pregnant with her 8th child, has decided, together with her husband, to give the baby up for adoption because of their poverty. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Beatriz Lopez gestures during an interview with Associated Press at her home in Olmos, Argentina, south of Buenos Aires, Thursday, March 13, 2008. Lopez, 32, pregnant with her 8th child, has decided, together with her husband, to give the baby up for adoption because of their poverty. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

A new study has suggested that women who conceive within six months of an initial miscarriage have the best chance of having a healthy pregnancy with the lowest complication rates.

Lead author, Sohinee Bhattacharya from University of Aberdeen, says that current World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines recommending that women who experience a miscarriage should wait at least six months before getting pregnant again may need to be reviewed.

Women who experience a miscarriage are not only at an increased risk of a second miscarriage, says the study, but also of complications in a subsequent pregnancy. Around one in five pregnancies ends in miscarriage before 24 weeks.

But the length of time couples should wait before trying again to get pregnant are not consistent, say the authors, with some doctors saying there is no justification for asking women to wait and other bodies, such as the WHO, recommending a wait of at least six months. This study was based on women delivering in Scotland and while the findings are valid for this population, the original WHO guidelines may still be applicable to women in developing countries.

Delaying getting pregnant is particularly problematic in the western world, they add, because “women over 35 are more likely to experience difficulties in conceiving and women aged 40 years have a 30 per cent chance of miscarriage which rises to 50 per cent in those aged 45 years or more ... any delay in attempting conception could further decrease their chance of a healthy baby.” The researchers reviewed the data of over 30,000 women who attended Scottish hospitals between 1981 and 2000. The participants all had a miscarriage in their first pregnancy and subsequently had another pregnancy.

The results show that women who conceived again within six months were less likely to have another miscarriage, termination of pregnancy or ectopic pregnancy compared to women who got pregnant between six and 12 months after their initial miscarriage.

The women who conceived within six months were also less likely to experience a caesarean section, deliver prematurely or have low birth weight babies. This association wasn’t explained by social and personal factors or by other problems in pregnancy including smoking.

“Our research shows that it is unnecessary for women to delay conception after a miscarriage,” the authors concluded.

The study has been published on bmj.com.

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