posted on 2025-02-06, 11:04authored byMaxi S Kniffka, Jonas Schöley, Susie Lee, Loes CM Bertens, Jasper V Been, Jóhanna Gunnarsdóttir, Alex Farr, Jeannette Klimont, Sophie Alexander, Wei-Hong Zhang, Gisèle Vandervelpen, Rumyana Kolarova, Evelin Yordanova, Željka Draušnik, Theopisti Kyprianou, Vasos Scoutellas, Petr Velebil, Laust Hvas Mortensen, Luule Sakkeus, Liili Abuladze, Mika Gissler, Anna Heino, Béatrice Blondel, Catherine Deneux-Tharaux, Mélanie Durox, Alice Hocquette, Marianne Philibert, Jennifer Zeitlin, Jeanne Fresson, Guenther Heller, Bjoern Misselwitz, Aris Antsaklis, István Sziller, Johanna Gunnarsdottir, Helga Sól Ólafsdóttir, Karen Kearns, Izabela Sikora, Marina Cuttini, Marzia Loghi, Serena Donati, Rosalia Boldrini, Janis Misins, Irisa Zile, Jelena Isakova, Aline Lecomte, Audrey Billy, Jessica Pastore, Daniel Alvarez, Miriam Gatt, Jan Nijhuis, Lisa Broeders, Peter Achterberg, Ashna Hindori-Mohangoo, Kari Klungsoyr, Rupali Akerkar, Hilde Engjom, Katarzyna Szamotulska, Ewa Mierzejewska, Henrique Barros, Mihai Horga, Vlad Tica, Mihaela-Alexandra Budianu, Alexandra Cucu, Cristian Calomfirescu, Jan Cap, Miha Lučovnik, Ivan Verdenik, Oscar Zurriaga, Adela Recio Alcaide, María Fernández Elorriaga, Mireia Jané, Maria José Vidal, Karin Källén, Anastasia Nyman, Tonia Rihs, Alison Macfarlane, Sonya Scott, Kirsten Monteath, Lucy SmithLucy Smith, Ruth Matthews, Siobhán Morgan, Joanne Murphy
Abstract
Stillbirth rates have stalled or increased in some European countries during the last decade. We investigate to what extent time-trends and between-country differences in stillbirth rates are explained by the changing prevalence of advanced maternal age and teenage pregnancies or multiple births. We analysed data on stillbirths and live births by maternal age and multiplicity from 2010 to 2021 in 25 European countries using Kitagawa decomposition to separate rate differences into compositional and rate components. Rates significantly decreased in six countries, but increased in two. Changes in maternal age structure reduced national stillbirth rates by a maximum of 0.04 per 1000 in the Netherlands and increased rates by up to 0.85 in Cyprus. Changes in the prevalence of multiple births decreased rates by up to 0.19 in the Netherlands and increased rates by up to 0.01 across multiple countries. Maternal age differences explained between 0.11 of the below-European average stillbirth rate in Belgium and 0.13 of the above-average rate in Ireland. Excluding Cyprus, differences in multiple births explained between 0.05 of the below-average rate in Malta and 0.03 of the above-average rate in Ireland. For most countries, the increase in advanced-age pregnancies contributed to rising stillbirth rates over time, while reductions in multiples led to decreases in rates. However, large parts of the trends remain unexplained by those factors. By 2021, neither factor explained the differences between countries, due to increased compositional uniformity and declining stillbirth risk for advanced maternal age.
Funding
Susie Lee was funded/co-funded by the European Union (ERC, BIOSFER, 101071773).
History
Author affiliation
College of Life Sciences
Population Health Sciences