Scientists Have Now Analyzed Ultrasounds for Birth Defects Associated With COVID-19 Vaccines

Emily Miller Fetal Ultrasound

Dr. Emily Miller explains elements of a fetal ultrasound to fellow study author Dr. Rachel Ruderman. Credit: Northwestern University

COVID-19 Vaccine Not Associated With Birth Defects Detectable on Ultrasound

Findings fill gap left vacant when pregnant people were excluded from the initial trials.

  • Scientists analyzed ultrasounds for a wide range of birth defects from life-long and severe to short-term and mild
  • Study advances earlier CDC data that found similar results
  • In the U.S., 3 to 5% of births are impacted by birth defects

The exclusion of pregnant patients in initial COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials left many patients and doctors wondering how the vaccine might affect pregnant patients and their unborn babies. A new Northwestern Medicine study has found the vaccine is not associated with birth defects that are detectable on ultrasound.

“This is yet another important piece of data that helps bridge the chasm that was left when pregnant individuals were excluded from those initial vaccine trials,” said corresponding author Dr. Emily Miller, chief of obstetrics at Northwestern Medicine and assistant professor of maternal fetal medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

The study will be published on April 4, 2022, in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.

“One of the reasons women struggle with the vaccine in pregnancy is they’re worried about their babies and don’t want to take any risks,” said first author Dr. Rachel Ruderman, a fourth-year resident in obstetrics and gynecology at Feinberg. “This study shows there really is no increased risk of birth defects, and it supports other evidence that shows the vaccine is safe and beneficial for mom and baby.”

Study analyzed for a wide range of birth defects

The types of birth defects the scientists were looking for on the study participants’ ultrasounds were ones they deemed “major fetal structural anomalies,” such as the baby’s heart not forming correctly or the spine not closing properly. In the United States, 3 to 5% of births are impacted by these types of defects, resulting in increases in infant morbidity, mortality and billions of dollars in cost.

“During the early part of pregnancy when the organs are forming, there can be abnormalities in how they form, and they can take the form of birth defects that can have implications for the life of the child,” Miller said.

“For example, if the baby’s heart isn’t forming correctly, that could lead to the baby needing major cardiac surgery or long-term medication,” Miller said. “However, if the ultrasound identified extra fluid in the fetus’ kidney, that might end up fixing itself down the road. We looked for those extremes and everything in between.”

Study advances CDC’s previous findings

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in September 2021 released similar findings from its study in pregnant individuals. This study builds on and advances the CDC’s data, Miller said.

While the CDC compared its study data to historical data, the new Northwestern study used contemporary controls—current pregnant patients who chose not to get vaccinated or were not vaccinated within the window the scientists defined as of biologic risk for birth defects (having received vaccination from 30 days prior to conception until 14 weeks gestational age).

“I think the big strength of this study is that we compared against other women who were vaccinated, but at different point in their pregnancies,” Miller said. “People who choose vaccination are often different from people who choose not to be vaccinated. Our study design helps account for some of those differences.”

The study analyzed electronic medical records (including ultrasounds and COVID-19 vaccination records) from a cohort of 3,156 pregnant people who received a complete fetal anatomical survey (19-week ultrasound) at Northwestern Medicine Prentice Women’s Hospital between March and November 2021. Of those pregnant patients, 2,622 (83.1%) received at least one vaccine dose and 1,149 (43.8%) were vaccinated inside of the scientists’ defined vaccination window (30 days prior to conception until 14 weeks gestational age).

Findings will hopefully further boost trust in vaccines

Both Miller and Ruderman see patients at Prentice. As part of her residency, Ruderman also sees patients at the John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County. Despite new and emerging data that continue to support the safety of vaccination among pregnant individuals, hesitancy is still present, they said.

“Patients say, ‘I don’t think the data is good, and everyone is getting COVID anyway, so why would I expose my baby?’” said Ruderman, who received her booster shot during week 12 of pregnancy. “Then I tell people, ‘Actually, the data is really good,’ and I feel like they’re receptive. So, these findings will only add to that.”

Reference: “Association of COVID-19 Vaccination During Early Pregnancy With Risk of Congenital Fetal Anomalies” by Rachel S. Ruderman, MD, MPH; Jessica Mormol, BS; Emma Trawick, MD; Madeline F. Perry, MD; Emma C. Allen, BS; Danielle Millan, BS and Emily S. Miller, MD, MPH, 4 April 2022, JAMA Pediatrics.
DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2022.0164

11 Comments on "Scientists Have Now Analyzed Ultrasounds for Birth Defects Associated With COVID-19 Vaccines"

  1. Thomas Murphy | April 5, 2022 at 1:50 pm | Reply

    “Scientists Have Now Analyzed Ultrasounds for Birth Defects Associated With COVID-19 Vaccines” versus “COVID-19 Vaccine Not Associated With Birth Defects Detectable”. Which is it? The headline says they checked for these defects associated with covid-19 vaccines, and the lead says a vaccine isn’t associated with defects. The headline says they are associated. Is it a singular vaccine and not the plural used? Are they just not detectable on ultrasound? Am I looking at misinformation, clickbait, FUD, or manipulation?

    • They analyzed them and no issues appeared. You’re looking at a reading comprehension issue.

      • It’s nothing to do with reading comprehension, it’s simply a badly worded headline.

        • It’s not a poorly worded headline. They analyzed them and it says no differently. If you want to be spoonfed like a baby without having to click, that’s a personal issue. God forbid you sprain a finger handling that mouse.

          • I’ve had another look at the headline and must apologise, it does, on second reading, look very confusing. Please ignore my last post.

  2. “Study analyzed for a wide range of birth defects
    The types of birth defects the scientists were looking for on the study participants’ ultrasounds were ones they deemed “major fetal structural anomalies…”

    In other words, not a “wide range of birth defects,” just the most obvious ones. I don’t have a dog in this hunt, but really, this is PR for the vaccines and does not address their actual safety. No one knows — or can know yet — with 100% confidence what that is. In the case of DES, for example, it took a generation for the birth defect caused by the drug (sterility in daughters of women given DES during early pregnancy) to be discovered.

    • You can’t check everything in one study. You lied when you said you don’t have a dog in this fight, because you would have acknowledged and accepted that.

      The only fraud I see here is you.

  3. @NB: No “fraud” here. Not sure why you would think that? I am not against vaccines — at all. I am criticizing the sloppy editing which let “wide range of birth defects” through, when that is not the case.

  4. Melissa Swaney | June 17, 2022 at 6:07 am | Reply

    I find it hard to believe that there are no findings of birth defects among women who have had the Johnson and Johnson vaccine…my daughter had two perfectly normal and healthy pregnancies and births and then got the J&J vaccine and this pregnancy the baby had anencephaly and was told her future pregnancies would be the same…if she wanted to have another baby she would need to take 10x the amount of folic acid and prenatal pills all while trying to get pregnant!!! This is a very rare birth defect… SOMETHING IS SERIOUSLY WRONG WITH ANY STUDY TO SAY THERE IS NO FINDINGS LINKED TO BIRTH DEFECTS AND THE VACCINES!!!!!!

  5. I agree Melissa Swaney!!! My daughter-in-law took the J & J vaccine in her first trimester. My handsome grandson was born with an extremely rare foot deformity & 6 toes. He just had surgery to remove 2 toes which included a severely deformed big toe!! Now he will have to live with this deformed foot & may never walk normally. 😢 He is almost 9 months old. The surgeon said he’d never seen such a bad deformity!! Do I believe the vaccine caused it? YES!! His 4 yr. old brother, first pregnancy was completely normal & there is NO history of ANY birth defects on either side of the family!! We are being LIED to & our babies & young people who get it have no idea what other issues may come out in the years to come. WAKE UP PEOPLE!!! Save our children & future children from the side effects of this vaccine!!!

    • Jaimee Schider | August 6, 2022 at 7:54 am | Reply

      I took the J&J vaccine when I was 13 weeks pregnant and my daughter was born with a cloudy cornea- corneal opacity which occurred late in the first trimester. Also a very rare birth defect affecting 6/100,000. I think it’s a little more than a coincidence. Every time I try to talk to a doctor about a possible link between this and the vaccine they get defensive. The timeline matches up! There is something going on. It’s so unsettling.

Leave a Reply to NB Cancel reply

Email address is optional. If provided, your email will not be published or shared.