Objective: To define the etiology of preterm twin births and determine the contribution of twin births to preterm birth and related morbidity and mortality.
Methods: The March of Dimes Multicenter Prematurity and Prevention Study included a total of 33,873 women who delivered between 1982-1986, 432 (1.3%) of which delivered twins. Women were classified by reason for preterm birth and ethnicity. Neonates were classified as to stillbirth, neonatal death, and various short-term morbidities. A second data set from one center consisted of infants who weighed 1000 g or less, were born between 1979-1991, and survived to 1 year of age (n = 386, 15% twins); this was used to determine if twins and singletons born at comparable gestational ages have a similar risk for major developmental handicaps.
Results: Of the deliveries in the data set, 54% of twins were preterm compared with 9.6% among singletons. Of those born preterm, twins were born at a significantly earlier gestational age than were singletons. Only 2.6% of all neonates born were twins, but they represented 12.2% of all preterm infants, 15.4% of all neonatal deaths, and 9.5% of all fetal deaths. Spontaneous labor accounted for 54% of twin births, premature rupture of membranes accounted for 22%, and indicated deliveries accounted for 23%. Of the indicated preterm births in twins, 44% were due to maternal hypertension, 33% to fetal distress or fetal growth restriction, 9% to placental abruption, and 7% to fetal death. Comparing infants of similar gestational age, twins weighed less, but had a mortality equivalent to that of singletons after 29 weeks. Between 26-28 weeks' gestation, the risk of mortality for twins versus singletons was 1.6 (95% confidence interval 1.1-2.5). Preterm twins did not have significantly more respiratory distress syndrome, intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, or other short-term morbidity than did preterm singletons. Twins who weighed 500-1000 g and survived to 1 year had a 25% rate of major developmental handicaps. However, when gestational age was controlled, the rate of major handicaps was not higher in twins than in singletons.
Conclusions: Twins accounted for a disproportional amount of preterm birth and associated morbidity and mortality. Also, when preterm twins were compared with preterm singletons and corrected for their gestational ages, the rates of morbidity were similar. Preterm twins weighing less than 1000 g did not have an increased prevalence of major handicaps at 1 year of age compared with preterm singletons.