Multimorbid Pregnancy: Determinants, Clusters, Consequences and Trajectories (MuM-PreDiCCT)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Birmingham
Department Name: Institute of Applied Health Research

Abstract

The Problem
Multimorbidity is when people suffer from more than one long-term illness. It can be difficult for people with several long-term illnesses to manage their conditions and sometimes they don't receive the best quality care. Patients with multimorbidity may have to coordinate appointments with different specialists and their medications need to be managed carefully. During pregnancy, these challenges may increase for women with multimorbidity.
We know that multimorbidity in pregnancy is becoming more common, but we don't understand why this is and what the consequences are for mothers and babies. Without this deeper understanding of the problem, women with several long-term illnesses won't have the best experience of care before, during and after pregnancy because services are not tailored to their specific needs.

Our aims and approach
Our collaboration will bring together experts in data analysis, diseases and public health from 7 academic institutions in the UK. We will work in close partnership with women with experience of multimorbidity in pregnancy.
Firstly, our data specialists will look at electronic health records to find out how many women have multimorbidity in pregnancy and what illnesses they have. We will try and identify if factors such as age, weight, cultural or social background, level of education and number of previous pregnancies influences whether a woman has multimorbidity in pregnancy.
We will also find out which illnesses group together(cluster) during pregnancy, which clusters are most common and whether some clusters affect some women more than others.
In the second part of the study, we will compare what happens to mothers with and without multimorbidity during pregnancy. We will find out whether women with multimorbidity are more likely to develop illnesses during the pregnancy (e.g. gestational diabetes), after the pregnancy (e.g postnatal depression) and also in the longer-term (e.g. heart-disease). We will also look at the health and wellbeing of children of women with multimorbidity in pregnancy.
The third part of our research will focus on medications in pregnancy. We will find out what medicines women with multimorbidity take during pregnancy and how the medications affect the health of the mother and the baby during pregnancy. This knowledge will help doctors prescribe safely during pregnancy.
We know that complications in pregnancy are a warning sign of future illnesses in women. As part of this project, we will be able to find out more about how different pregnancy complications affect the longer-term health of women. We can use this knowledge to put preventative measures in place where possible.
Finally, we will meet with women and healthcare professionals to discuss the services available for women with multimorbidity in pregnancy. We will find out how appropriate and accessible these services are and how services can be improved. Going forward, this will help us to jointly design health services with women and their partners.

Involving the public
We will work in partnership with women with experience of multimorbidity in pregnancy. Their insights will help ensure that our project is grounded in the experiences of women and that all stages of the project drive towards improving care for women.

Sharing our findings
Our team has large networks and we will share our findings with healthcare professionals, through professional organisations (e.g. Royal Colleges of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists); through NHS networks (e.g. Local Maternity Services) and through charities and women's networks (e.g. Maternity Voice Partnerships).

Our Impact
This study will give healthcare professionals and women a much better understanding of multimorbidity in pregnancy. Through this enhanced understanding, we will be able to plan and design services that meet the needs of women and their families before, during and after the birth of their babies.

Technical Summary

Our vision is to characterise multimorbidity (MM) in pregnant women and then investigate the consequences of MM. To do so we will use electronic medical records, birth cohort and clinical trials data from across the four nations in the UK. We will work to develop harmonious definitions of variables and linkage algorithms to ensure comparable methods across the datasets. We will describe the proportion of women affected by MM and prevalence of each combinations of morbidities. We will apply clustering and trajectory methods to identify clusters and sequence dependent clusters. Then we will investigate if MM status and clusters differ by age, deprivation, ethnicity, parity, body mass index and lifestyle factors. By identifying the characteristics of patients within these clusters, we will be able to develop preventive interventions.

We will then study how MM pregnancy impacts on the health of mothers and offspring. Initially we will use established consensus methods to develop a core outcome set for MM pregnancy research. Then we will determine the rates of these outcomes in both mothers and offspring based on their MM status and then based on prescription combinations they have received. Findings will help to monitor and prevent adverse outcomes. Findings will also help improve safe prescribing during pregnancy.

Our previous work has demonstrated that pregnancy related complications are associated with future morbidities. Using this information and other covariates we will use bio-statistical and machine learning methods to develop and validate prediction models for long-term outcomes. This is expected to help with prevention and early identification of future morbidities.

Finally to improve maternity services, a mixed methods study will be conducted with patients and health professionals to understand current service provision and their limitations. This will then lead to co-designing of pathways for pregnant women with MM.

Publications

10 25 50

 
Description BHF Data Science Centre PhD Studentship in Cardiovascular data Science
Amount £176 (GBP)
Organisation British Heart Foundation (BHF) 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2021 
End 09/2025
 
Description Investigating the implementation of a platform for electronic health record (EHR) automated clinical epidemiology into an NHS trust maternity division.
Amount £93,531 (GBP)
Organisation Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 02/2022 
End 12/2023
 
Description MLTC-M Community of Practice in ECR training on best practice patient and public involvement with diverse populations
Amount £49,838 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/X004341/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2022 
End 01/2024
 
Description MuM-PreDiCT Clinical Research Fellow
Amount £72,000 (GBP)
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2021 
End 02/2023
 
Description Multimorbidity and Pregnancy: Determinants, Clusters, Consequences and Trajectories (MuM-PreDiCT)
Amount £2,948,688 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/W014432/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2021 
End 08/2024
 
Description PhD in Applied Health Research, Clinical Research Fellow,
Amount £80,000 (GBP)
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 08/2022 
End 08/2024
 
Description Planning mode of birth in routine antenatal care - development of a decision-aid (Plan-A)
Amount £974 (GBP)
Organisation National Institute for Health Research 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2022 
End 03/2025
 
Description The HDRUK/Turing Wellcome PhD Programme in Health Data Science
Amount £6,005,246 (GBP)
Funding ID 218529/Z/19/Z 
Organisation Wellcome Trust 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2020 
End 06/2028
 
Description Using big data to optimise preconception health among women with mental illness
Amount £110 (GBP)
Organisation National Institute for Health Research 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2023 
End 03/2024
 
Description impRoving testing for cardiometabolic diseases in women with previous gestational diabetes: an exemplar study on implementation and evaluation of a novel dAta-DrIven rANdomised clinical Trial platform in primary care (RADIANT)
Amount £345,885 (GBP)
Organisation National Institute for Health Research 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 06/2022 
End 05/2024
 
Title Clustering methodology 
Description mmVAE: multimorbidity clustering using Relaxed Bernoulli ß-Variational Autoencoders 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact NA 
URL https://proceedings.mlr.press/v193/gadd22a/gadd22a.pdf
 
Title DextER Updated version 
Description DExtER is a software that was created before the fellowship. This forms the basis on which the whole new Automated Clinical Epidemiology Studies (ACES) platform will work. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Needless to say the tool enable data extraction according to study designs within a couple of hours compared to weeks and months previously 
URL https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/activity/applied-health/research/health-informatics/Automated-...
 
Title Clustering methodology 
Description mmVAE: multimorbidity clustering using Relaxed Bernoulli ß-Variational Autoencoders 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact NA 
URL https://proceedings.mlr.press/v193/gadd22a/gadd22a.pdf
 
Description Cegedim 
Organisation Cegedim
Country France 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Cegedim is an industry that provides THIN data and also the provider of the VISION EHR. We have provided license to them to use DExtER, our innovative tool for automated clinical epidemiology studies. We have also provided expertise on processing the THIN database
Collaborator Contribution Cegedim provided the THIN data for COVID19 related research.
Impact 4 Publications on COVID19 research
Start Year 2020
 
Description Christine Damase-Michel-Pharmaco-epidemiologist,Associate Professor, Senior Pharmacologist, Medical and Clinical Pharmacology, 
Organisation University of Toulouse
Country France 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Team to provide pharmaco-epidemiology studies and clinical insight to to the observations made in the process
Collaborator Contribution guide all the pharmaco-epidemiology studies and contribute to organising the pharmacovigilance workshops,help with the study using EUROmediCAT database
Impact Form a team to conduct the pharmaco-epidemiology studies and help with the study using EUROmediCAT database
Start Year 2020
 
Description Gillian Santorelli,Principal Statistician, Bradford Institute for Health Research 
Organisation Bradford Institute for Health Research (BIHR)
Department Born in Bradford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Provide support with the analysis of the data and clinical insight
Collaborator Contribution ensuring the linkage to required data is in place, and extracting data from BiBs data warehouses
Impact NA
Start Year 2020
 
Description Helen Dolk,Prof of Epidemiology and Health Services Research 
Organisation Ulster University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Provide a wider team to access and identify the gaps and provide clinical support
Collaborator Contribution contributing to WP4, on polypharmacy, to identify suitable European data sources, help build research protocols for the future, and contribute to the design and conduct of an exemplar study using the EUROmediCAT database.
Impact NA
Start Year 2020
 
Description Holly Hope-epidemiologist within the Centre for Women's Mental Health in Manchester University 
Organisation University of Manchester
Department Manchester Museum
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Provided insight about pharmacoepidemiology in the pregnant women with multimorbidity
Collaborator Contribution Using specific expertise and knowledge of the CPRD dataset developed an algorithm to identify mental health conditions from routinely collected health data. Instrumental to the phenome definitions of mental health conditions across datasets. Involved in interpreting data from the consolidator phase, and contributed to writing the resulting manuscripts and collaborator grant proposal.
Impact Using specific expertise and knowledge of the CPRD dataset developed an algorithm to identify mental health conditions from routinely collected health data. Instrumental to the phenome definitions of mental health conditions across datasets. Involved in interpreting data from the consolidator phase, and contributed to writing the resulting manuscripts and collaborator grant proposal.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Kathryn M Abel Professor of Psychological Medicine and Reproductive Psychiatry 
Organisation University of Manchester
Department Manchester Museum
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We provided insight around pharmaco-epidemiology methods for polypharmacy
Collaborator Contribution Provided clinical insights for perinatal mental health and advised on how mental health conditions interacts with physical health conditions, the epidemiology of perinatal mental health conditions and the maternal and offspring outcomes for mothers with mental health conditions. Also advised on how to engage with traditionally hard-to-reach under-represented groups and advised on the ethical issues of engaging women with mental health conditions in research.
Impact will be the mental health lead and co-lead WP1's work on identifying the determinants of morbidity clusters dominated by mental health conditions and the determinants of their trajectories. Use my clinical network to help engage women with complex social factors and mental health conditions to participate in WP2 and as PPI.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Maria Loane Reader/ Senior Research Fellow in Public Health. 
Organisation Ulster University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Provided clinical expertise and
Collaborator Contribution Liaise with the EUROmediCAT registries about their data on the chosen combination of medications for the combination of health conditions that will be included in the exemplar study. I will help build protocols using the EUROmediCAT database and will also contribute my experience of NI pregnancy (NIMATS) and prescription (EPD) data to other WP.
Impact None so far
Start Year 2020
 
Description Maria Loane,Reader/ Senior Research Fellow in Public Health, 
Organisation Ulster University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Provide clinical insight to the various questions and hurdles arising during the process of data analysis
Collaborator Contribution liaise with the EUROmediCAT registries about their data on the chosen combination of medications for the combination of health conditions
Impact None yet
Start Year 2020
 
Description Nelson-Piercy, Catherine - Professor of obstetric medicine and consultant obstetric physician 
Organisation St George’s Hospital
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Hospitals 
PI Contribution We provided insight around pharmaco-epidemiology methods for polypharmacy
Collaborator Contribution provided clinical insight from an obstetric medicine's perspective and clinical interpretation of the epidemiological findings.Also advised on the pathway to impact and established the link with the Safer Medicines in Pregnancy & Breastfeeding consortium as impact partners.
Impact Provided clinical interpretation of the epidemiological findings
Start Year 2020
 
Description Ulster University 
Organisation Ulster University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have analysed data to identify combination of medications that needs studied in multimorbid pregnancies.
Collaborator Contribution Key study designs for the euromedicat database
Impact We have added Ulster University as a collaborator
Start Year 2020
 
Description University College London 
Organisation University College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Project 1: LHS4NHS We have developed a prototype for a data driven learning health systems for hospital care in the National Health Service (LHS4NHS). The project expands on the existing success of the data extraction for epidemiological research (DExtER) tool developed by our team at the University of Birmingham. By adding on additional functionality such as automated study analytics and computable guideline we demonstrated the flow of data to knowledge and knowledge to practice in secondary care (Figure 1). Project 2: OPEHRRA We are currently in the process of developing OPEHRRA (OPen Electronic Health Record Research and Analytics platform) which is a novel platform designed for researchers and clinicians, by researchers and clinicians, to support them in managing their local, regional and national patient populations. The purpose of the platform will enable researchers and clinicians to engage all aspects of the 'open science' cycle including the open release of study design, data extraction and publication. They will have the opportunity to review the work of others in the network as well as request reviews for your own work. The ultimate goal is to make science transparent, reliable and accurate. OPEHRRA has several key elements to it including: 1. Open access protocol submission 2. Open protocol peer review comments and ethical approval 3. Open clinical code list generation and storage 4. Open data extraction 5. Open analytics 6. Open manuscript deposition and peer review
Collaborator Contribution They developed a framework for informatics consult
Impact The main output of LHS4NHS is a demonstrator of a data driven learning health system with inbuilt computable clinical guideline and an informatics consult tool for secondary care data. The example we demonstrated in the better care event was based on a case study for managing diabetes in hospitalised patients with COVID19. We are currently in the process of writing this up as a manuscript. The main output of OPEHRRA is an online demonstration of a portal for the research community to conduct 'open-science' using electronic health record data.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Zoe Vowles Clinical Research Midwife 
Organisation Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Using clinical experience as a registered midwife, will contribute in the collaborative phase of MuM-PreDiCT by offering a clinical insight from a midwifery perspective.
Collaborator Contribution bbbbbbbbbbb
Impact Using clinical experience as a registered midwife, will contribute in the collaborative phase of MuM-PreDiCT by offering a clinical insight from a midwifery perspective.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Deep dive sessions 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Patients, carers and/or patient groups
Results and Impact Various deepdives were organised in an effort to estimate the issues with certain groups facing more issues during the maternity pathways
We have conducted the deeepdives focuused on the LGBT mommies ,mental health conditions and various other local comminitiesand these have helped understand the gaps in the services and various other issues in the care pathway.Conducted 4 deep dive sessions and few planned over the year.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description IAHR seminar 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact presentation of the various programmes
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020,2021
 
Description MuM-Pre-DiCT website 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact The website is the platform for disseminating information about the programme through,publishing resources, videolinks,blogs and meeting minutes(of the operational monthly meetings of mumpredict)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description MuM-PreDiCT dissemination event 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact NA
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description MuMPreDiCT: Dissemination and engagement 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The event was organised to share findings from the work we carried out during the grant period.

All videos can be found in:
https://mumpredict.org/video-recordings-from-the-18th-feb-2021-dissemination-webinar/
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://mumpredict.org/video-recordings-from-the-18th-feb-2021-dissemination-webinar/
 
Description Newcastle-Birmingham joint seminar 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Discussion and presentations on Epidemiology of multimorbidity in pregnant women and birthing people and medications in pregnancy
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description PPI Advisory group meetings 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Patients, carers and/or patient groups
Results and Impact These engagments occur regularly and the items discuused can be accessed on the mumpredict website
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dbbeGljpJzB7T8p8RjfGbf1xmyPYh8Rehs1PKRZbQP8/edit

The following points were discussed in these meetings
Aug 2020
- Research very much needed - too many questions during pregnancy answered with "that's just how it's done"

- Reduction in number of appointments (and support) between 1st and subsequent pregnancies, even if long term conditions developed after 1st pregnancy

- Would like to know if there is a higher incidence of mental health conditions amongst women with two or more long term health conditions, especially postnatally

- What's the impact on breastfeeding?

- Will you be collecting data on over-the-counter supplements?

- Women with two or more long term health conditions need more support to plan both becoming pregnant and postnatal care

- Do these women experience more trauma in childbirth?

- Managing (and trying to enjoy) a healthy pregnancy, as well as managing clinicians' concerns about your medical history

- Feeling privileged that we're able to use some crappy experiences to improve things for other women

- Lots of care available (for some) during pregnancy, especially when hospital appointments took place, but then felt like you were dropped very soon after birth. GPs didn't have any specialist knowledge.

- Very varied support for mental health. Also a lack of knowledge, even among GPs, about what is available

- Really excited about the project and really proud to be part of it

- Good antenatal care helps give women confidence about birth and becoming a mother

- Partners are particularly important for feeling like you've got someone on your side

- Some health professionals expect too much of their patients - they expect you to know everything about your conditions, but also give the impression they don't believe you when you ask for things like pain medication

- Planning for this research to have impact for pregnant women is very important

- Planning postnatal care is important, and we'd like to know how long a postnatal period the study is looking at. Postnatal care needs to be extended, and to take account of factors such as long term health conditions, premature baby, feeding preferences, help at home

- Want to know more about experiences in different stages: pregnancy, labour, postnatal - breastfeeding, perineal care

- Can we make recommendations about how to speak sensitively to women in labour?

- Interested in any links between two or more health conditions and prematurity

- The project title needs to be simpler - MumPredict is ok but the tagline needs to be more easily understandable for parents

Oct 2020

- To consider both physical and mental trauma related to pregnancy affected by 2 or more medical conditions
- Be aware of impact of previous abuse on pregnancy and birth experiences, especially in women with disabilities where the incidence of abuse is much higher

- Post natal period should cover 12 months
Nov 2020
- Define what 'long-term' health conditions mean ?12months ? 5 years, this will help women to self-identify when we recruit participants

- Study results presentation:
o Would like to see quantitative results
o Presented as visual charts/ images/ infographics with headline results / animation like TED talks
o Videos of mothers talking about their maternity care experience, in a more personal way, and how the study results fit in

- Women with MM would like to have information on:
o how MM impacts on their babies (labour, short, long term impact)
o if it is safe to have a pregnancy
o how pregnancy will impact on family planning, especially 2nd pregnancy as having to cope with 2 babies/children may be harder with the underlying MM
o discussed the importance for antenatal pregnancy planning for high risk women
- Other items:
o reassurance, not to be made to feel they stand out in a negative way, and more emphasis on the normality of their pregnancy
o what support they are entitled to
o how to address their concerns,
o what information sources are available, and supportive communication
o Want to be inspiring and a role model

- Recruitment for video recording of interviews (WP2)
- Women will be at different stages of journey and have different readiness / willingness for video recording to be shared.
- Filming may make some feel more vulnerable. Also, some health conditions carry more stigma. Consider anonymising video recordings (not to show face, changing voice, use animation) as some of the stories can be quite sensitive and personal.
- Women with MM value having inspirational models of success pregnancy stories. Could consider selling this positive impact it can have for others, to recruit women for video recording.

- Recruitment strategies include channels and wording
- Lack of information on drug safety
- often onus is on women to decide whether to take medications or not
- Lack of follow up after child birth
Feb 2021
- Would like to ensure rare debilitating diseases are not missed out as felt change in practice is required most for those with complex health needs (severity of impact of condition vs common low impact conditions)

- Further suggestion on how to advertise dissemination event to the public, including via food bank, local authorities, social media platforms frequented by parents. Also discussed impact to pathway.

- Keen to see what are the outcomes 1 year post pregnancy as some underlying diseases can get worse in that first year
- Research proposal some parts were quite technical, especially the part about modelling
- Suggestions to the website design and layout
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022,2023
 
Description Role model: Krishnarajah Nirantharakumar 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Article in the bmj open about the principal investigator Prof.Krishnarajah Nirantharakumar
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.bmj.com/content/374/bmj.n2221
 
Description SPF Multimorbidity Wave 2 Launch and Networking Event/Steering Group Meeting 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presentations and discussions on other programmes on multimorbidities. Followed by Group work and discussions
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Workshop-Mumpredict-to decide on the long term health conditions 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The purpose for this workshop was to finalise the list of long term health conditions to be included
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description local university news briefing 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact local university news briefing of receiving the new grant,

https://mumpredict.org/mum-predict-gets-funded/
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://mumpredict.org/mum-predict-gets-funded/