TY - BOOK AU - Barac, Ana TI - In-Hospital Complications in Pregnant Women With Current or Historical Cancer Diagnoses PY - 2021/// KW - *Neoplasms KW - *Obstetric Labor Complications KW - *Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular KW - *Pregnancy Complications, Neoplastic KW - *Premature Birth/ep [Epidemiology] KW - Adult KW - Arrhythmias, Cardiac/di [Diagnosis] KW - Arrhythmias, Cardiac/ep [Epidemiology] KW - Cardiomyopathies/di [Diagnosis] KW - Cardiomyopathies/ep [Epidemiology] KW - Comorbidity KW - Female KW - Humans KW - Maternal Mortality KW - Neoplasm Staging KW - Neoplasms/cl [Classification] KW - Neoplasms/ep [Epidemiology] KW - Neoplasms/pa [Pathology] KW - Obstetric Labor Complications/di [Diagnosis] KW - Obstetric Labor Complications/et [Etiology] KW - Pregnancy KW - Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular/di [Diagnosis] KW - Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular/ep [Epidemiology] KW - Pregnancy Complications, Neoplastic/di [Diagnosis] KW - Pregnancy Complications, Neoplastic/ep [Epidemiology] KW - Pregnancy Outcome/ep [Epidemiology] KW - Risk Assessment/sn [Statistics & Numerical Data] KW - Spatio-Temporal Analysis KW - United States/ep [Epidemiology] KW - MedStar Heart & Vascular Institute KW - Journal Article N1 - Available online from MWHC library: 1995 - present, Available in print through MWHC library: 1999 - 2006 N2 - CONCLUSION: Women with a current or historical diagnosis of cancer at delivery have more comorbidities compared with women without cancer. Clinicians should communicate the risks of multisystem complications to these complex patients. Copyright (c) 2021 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved; METHODS: We analyzed delivery hospitalizations with or without current or historical cancer between January 1, 2004, and December 31, 2014, from the US National Inpatient Sample database; OBJECTIVE: To assess the temporal trends, characteristics and comorbidities, and in-hospital cardiovascular and obstetric complications and outcomes of pregnant women with current or historical cancer diagnosis at the time of admission for delivery; RESULTS: We included 43,132,097 delivery hospitalizations with no cancer, 39,118 with current cancer, and 67,336 with historical diagnosis of cancer. The 5 most common types of current cancer were hematologic, thyroid, cervical, skin, and breast cancer. Women with current and historical cancer were older (29 years and 32 years vs 27 years) and incurred higher hospital costs ( UR - https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mayocp.2021.03.038 ER -