A fifteen-year retrospective review of obstetric patients requiring critical care

Obstet Med. 2012 Dec;5(4):166-170. doi: 10.1258/om.2012.120033. Epub 2012 Nov 5.

Abstract

Background: Maternal mortality is a rare occurrence in developed nations. Given the low maternal mortality rate, other markers must be used to assess maternal risk and quality of obstetric care. One such is admission to critical care.

Aims: To determine the rate of admission, diagnosis and management of women from conception and up to 6 weeks postpartum to critical care units including coronary care (CCU), high dependency unit (HDU) and intensive care units (ICU).

Methods: We performed a retrospective review of obstetric patients requiring critical care admission from January 1995 to August 2010. Demographic details, obstetric history, place of admission (CCU, HDU or ICU) and fetal/neonatal outcomes were examined as were initial indication for critical care admission, final diagnosis and treatment administered.

Results: Data were available from 308 admission incidents. There were 259 (84%) admissions to ICU and 49 (15.9%) to CCU. More than a third of women were transferred from another institution. Those women transferred were more unwell and had a higher mortality rate than local women. Primary diagnoses: obstetric haemorrhage (ICU 30.9%), hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (ICU 16.2%, CCU 12.2%), infection (ICU 14.2%, CCU 6.1%), pre-existing cardiac disease (ICU 9.3%, CCU 55.1%).

Conclusions: The obstetric population represents only a small percentage of critical care utilisation and overall morbidity and mortality. However, this population is an important and growing group. Increased surveillance peripartum in a critical care facility allows earlier detection of maternal compromise and detailed management. Analysis of these 'near misses' in obstetrics aims to improve pregnancy outcomes.

Keywords: high-risk pregnancy; intensive care medicine; maternal mortality.