Neonatal inflammation, stress and growth factors after vaginal delivery,
pre-labour, and in-labour caesarean section: a retrospective cohort
study
Abstract
Objective To explore the effect of different delivery modes, vaginal
delivery compared to caesarean section with or without initiation of
labour, on the immune system and brain of the infants. Further, we aimed
to elucidate gender and gestational ages’ effect on these biomarkers.
Design Retrospective case control study Setting Dried blood spots from
new-born screening biobank drawn 2-4 days after birth Population or
Sample Mature new-borns divided into delivery by pre-labour (n=714),
in-labour caesarean section (n=655), and vaginally (n=5897). Method The
samples were analysed for inflammatory markers (IL-18, MCP-1, CRP, sTNF
RI), stress- (HSP-70), growth- (EGF, VEGF-A), and neurotrophic factors
(BDNF, NT-3, S100B). Main Outcome Measures Delivery by caesarean section
with or without initiation of labour Results The neonatal levels of
inflammatory and stress-markers were significantly lower, while the
levels of growth factors were higher after pre-labour caesarean section
compared to vaginal delivery. The biomarker levels were similar after
in-labour caesarean section and vaginal delivery. Males had generally
higher levels of inflammation and lower levels of growth and
neurotrophic factors. Overall, the levels of inflammatory markers
increased, and the growth factors decreased with increasing gestational
age. Conclusion The biomarker levels indicates that the labour process
has an important effect on the foetal immune system and level of stress,
regardless if the delivery ends with caesarean section or vaginal birth.
Funding ”Læge Sofus Carl Emil Friis og hustru Olga Doris Friis’ legat”
and ”Fonden til Lægevidenskabens Fremme”. Keywords Inflammation;
brain; CODIBINE; caesarean section; dried blood spot samples