CReATe Fertility Centre, 790 Bay Street, Suite 1100, Toronto, M5G1N8, Canada.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
J Ovarian Res. 2020 Nov 27;13(1):140. doi: 10.1186/s13048-020-00737-1.
Currently, the world is in the seventh month of the COVID-19 pandemic. Globally, infections with novel SARS-CoV-2 virus are continuously rising with mounting numbers of deaths. International and local public health responses, almost in synchrony, imposed restrictions to minimize spread of the virus, overload of health system capacity, and deficit of personal protective equipment (PPE). Although in most cases the symptoms are mild or absent, SARS-CoV-2 infection can lead to serious acute respiratory disease and multisystem failure. The research community responded to this new disease with a high level of transparency and data sharing; with the aim to better understand the origin, pathophysiology, epidemiology and clinical manifestations. The ultimate goal of this research is to develop vaccines for prevention, mitigation strategies, as well as potential therapeutics.The aim of this review is to summarize current knowledge regarding the novel SARS CoV-2, including its pathophysiology and epidemiology, as well as, what is known about the potential impact of COVID-19 on reproduction, fertility care, pregnancy and neonatal outcome. This summary also evaluates the effects of this pandemic on reproductive care and research, from Canadian perspective, and discusses future implications.In summary, reported data on pregnant women is limited, suggesting that COVID-19 symptoms and severity of the disease during pregnancy are similar to those in non-pregnant women, with pregnancy outcomes closely related to severity of maternal disease. Evidence of SARS-CoV-2 effects on gametes is limited. Human reproduction societies have issued guidelines for practice during COVID-19 pandemic that include implementation of mitigation practices and infection control protocols in fertility care units. In Canada, imposed restrictions at the beginning of the pandemic were successful in containing spread of the infection, allowing for eventual resumption of assisted reproductive treatments under new guidelines for practice. Canada dedicated funds to support COVID-19 research including a surveillance study to monitor outcomes of COVID-19 during pregnancy and assisted reproduction. Continuous evaluation of new evidence must be in place to carefully adjust recommendations on patient management during assisted reproductive technologies (ART) and in pregnancy.
目前,全球正处于 COVID-19 大流行的第七个月。新型 SARS-CoV-2 病毒的感染在持续增加,死亡人数不断上升。国际和地方公共卫生应对措施几乎同步实施限制措施,以最大程度减少病毒传播、医疗系统容量过载和个人防护设备(PPE)短缺。尽管大多数情况下症状较轻或无症状,但 SARS-CoV-2 感染可能导致严重急性呼吸疾病和多系统衰竭。研究界对这种新疾病做出了高度透明和数据共享的回应;目的是更好地了解其起源、发病机制、流行病学和临床表现。这项研究的最终目标是开发预防疫苗、缓解策略以及潜在的治疗方法。本综述旨在总结新型 SARS CoV-2 的现有知识,包括其发病机制和流行病学,以及了解 COVID-19 对生殖、生育护理、妊娠和新生儿结局的潜在影响。本综述还从加拿大的角度评估了这场大流行对生殖护理和研究的影响,并讨论了未来的影响。总之,报告的孕妇数据有限,表明 COVID-19 症状和妊娠期疾病严重程度与非孕妇相似,妊娠结局与母亲疾病严重程度密切相关。关于 SARS-CoV-2 对配子影响的证据有限。人类生殖学会已为 COVID-19 大流行期间的实践发布了指南,包括在生育护理单位实施缓解措施和感染控制方案。在加拿大,大流行初期实施的限制措施成功地遏制了感染的传播,使新的实践指南下能够恢复辅助生殖治疗。加拿大专门拨出资金支持 COVID-19 研究,包括一项监测研究,以监测妊娠和辅助生殖期间 COVID-19 的结局。必须不断评估新证据,以便仔细调整辅助生殖技术(ART)和妊娠期间患者管理的建议。