Complications of chickenpox in pregnancy
These are mostly as a result of infection of the foetus which may result in:
- the varicella syndrome when infection occurs early in pregnancy (1)
- risk of fetal varicella syndrome
- risk of the syndrome in children exposed to chickenpox in utero is around 0.5% if maternal chickenpox develops at 2-12 weeks of pregnancy
- 1.4% if it develops at 12-28 weeks
- 0% if it develops from 28 weeks onwards
- overall risk in the first 20 weeks of pregnancy is 0.91%
- risk of fetal varicella syndrome
- neonatal chickenpox can be severe when the maternal rash appears between five days before delivery and two days after delivery. Mortality may be as high as 30% without active treatment (2)
In the mother, smokers in the second or third trimester are at a particularly high risk of pneumonitis.
Notes:
- there is no evidence that uncomplicated chickenpox in the mother significantly increases the likelihood of spontaneous abortion during the first 20 weeks of pregnancy (3.0% in one study) or intrauterine death after the 20th week (0.7%) (3)
Reference:
- (1) Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin 2005; 43(12): 94-95.
- (2) Tunbridge AJ et al. Chickenpox in adults - Clinical management. Journal of Infection 2008;57:95e102
- (3) The Green Book. Immunisation against infectious disease. HMSO. London 1996.
- (4) Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin 2005; 43(9):69-72.
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