WASHINGTON - Pregnant people who are vaccinated against the coronavirus are nearly twice as likely to get COVID-19 as those who are not pregnant, according to a new study that offers the broadest evidence to date of the odds of infections among vaccinated patients with different medical circumstances.
The analysis, based on medical records of nearly 14 million U.S. patients since coronavirus immunization became available, found that pregnant people who are vaccinated have the greatest risk of developing COVID among a dozen medical states, including being an organ transplant recipient and having cancer.
The findings come on top of research showing that people who are pregnant or gave birth recently and became infected are especially prone to getting seriously ill from COVID-19. And COVID has been found to increase the risk of pregnancy complications, such as premature births.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been urging people to get coronavirus shots before or during pregnancy, seeking to dispel fear - widespread in some communities, without scientific basis - that those vaccinations could be harmful. As of March, nearly 70% of people who were pregnant have been vaccinated before or during their pregnancy, according to federal data, though disparities persist among racial and ethnic groups.
The new study goes beyond what has previously been understood, suggesting that even pregnant people who are fully vaccinated tend to have less protection from the virus than many other patients with significant medical problems.
"If you are fully vaccinated, that's magnificent," said a lead author of the study, David R. Little, a physician who is a researcher at Epic, a Wisconsin company that maintains electronic patient records for nearly 1,000 hospitals and more than 20,000 clinics across the country. "But if you are fully vaccinated and become pregnant, you remain at higher risk of acquiring COVID."
Little said the findings buttress CDC recommendations that additional precautions against the virus should be taken during pregnancy, such as wearing masks and maintaining safe distances. He said the study also suggests that health-care workers should "be on the lookout" for symptoms and encourage testing to detect the virus early, when it is easier to treat.
The analysis was based on Epic medical records from 13.8 million patients between January 2021, when the first people in the United States were fully vaccinated and had enough time to develop immunity, and late January this year. Little and colleagues analyzed the risk from 12 comorbidities throughout that period. The study included the delta and omicron variant surges but did not differentiate the rate of breakthrough infections during those waves or other times.