This study, conducted at a tertiary perinatal center in Vienna, revealed that 18.1 % of pregnant women smoked during pregnancy; 19.1 % smoked in 2007, the highest prevalence of 19.3 % was registered in 2008/2009, and a steady decline was observed thereafter, culminating in 15.6 % at the end of the study period in 2012. A survey conducted in 2002, comprising 576 pregnant women at the same hospital, had shown that 21.5 % smoked during pregnancy (unpublished data). Thus, the prevalence of smoking a few years before the commencement of the present investigation appears to have been even higher.
The most recent data in Austria—derived from 2010—show that 20–30 % of pregnant women smoked [10]. However, the rates registered in the present study were consistently lower than 20 %. Although maternal smoking has been decreasing in other countries over the last few years [5, 25] and a steady decline was also noted in the present investigation, smoking rates remain high among young mothers below 20 years of age (43.7 %) and those aged 20–25 years (28.8 %). In our population, smoking rates among women older than 36 years were below the overall prevalence.
The high prevalence of smoking among very young pregnant women has been attributed to the high-risk behavior and lack of responsibility at this age, which might have led to pregnancy in the first place [7, 12]. This may well be true in view of the fact that the smoking prevalence among pregnant women below the age of 20 years, registered in the present study, was approximately 20 % higher than that in the general population.
The present study revealed no association between age and the number of cigarettes smoked per day. The authors of previous studies mention that heavy smokers were largely older mothers because of their prolonged exposure to tobacco before pregnancy and therefore greater addiction to nicotine [9, 15]; both of these studies comprised much larger sample sizes.
We registered a reduction in smoking rates during pregnancy with the number of births. A positive correlation was noted between smoking during the first and second pregnancies but not between the second and third pregnancies. This might indicate rising awareness of the harmful effects of smoking on the part of the 15 women who experienced three pregnancies during the study period. However, it may also have been due to underreporting, secondary to social stigma experienced in previous pregnancies.
Although the present study did indicate a higher risk of preterm births in conjunction with smoking, the increased risk was not statistically significant. This may have been due to the sample size; the majority of studies addressing preterm births and maternal smoking comprised much larger sample sizes [3, 6, 13].
SGA is another birth outcome related to maternal smoking during pregnancy [24]. The present study clearly showed a higher risk of SGA among smoking mothers; the risk was 7.8 % higher and the number of cigarettes needed to cause harm (in respect of giving birth to an SGA child) was 12.9.
Although maternal smoking clearly declined in the study period (19.1 to 15.6 %), the decline in SGA children was not statistically significant. This may have been due to the transfer of high-risk pregnancies to the perinatal center and their impact on birth outcome statistics. Another explanation could be that smoking, in fact, did not decrease and the lower figures indirectly reflected underreporting in the last few years. As there have been no intensive campaigns denouncing smoking in Austria and smoking is commonly regarded as a habit rather than a health-damaging phenomenon, the underreporting thesis seems unlikely. Currently, we have no data concerning changes in underreporting rates.
The strength of the present study is its large sample size; 11,142 complete maternal records comprising self-reported smoking behavior, maternal characteristics, and neonatal outcome were studied. The most relevant limitation is that the information on smoking status is based on self-reporting alone. This may have led to underreporting because of the stigma associated with smoking, especially during pregnancy. Furthermore, underreporting may have been common in women who had experienced previous pregnancies with unfavorable outcomes and had been told that smoking cessation may prevent problems in the forthcoming pregnancy. Although a number of authors registered rather high discrepancies in self-reported smoking status and cotinine measurement [22], many of them agree that self-reporting is a reliable means of determining smoking status during pregnancy [14]. In a Spanish study [4], the authors observed accurate self-reporting (3.9 % misreporting) and a very similar overall prevalence of smoking as in the present study (18.5 %).
Another limitation of the present study is that no socioeconomic data were collected. However, given the fact that the entire investigation was performed in a single region and the same hospital setting, socioeconomic factors would probably have not changed considerably during the study years. In contrast to many countries, the absence of social security or access to prenatal and perinatal care is no hindrance in Austria; 98 % of the population have excellent social security coverage [20]. The high density of hospitals providing prenatal and perinatal care and the “mother-and-child card” (Mutter-Kind-Pass) is an established social security measure. This mother-and-child card includes free but mandatory examinations during pregnancy and until the child’s second birthday. The first mandatory examination must be completed before the 16th gestational week. This checkup is taken quite seriously because of its ensuing health benefits and child support payment.
A further limitation of the study is that the women’s smoking status was only documented once during pregnancy. For various reasons—such as the woman’s condition being graded as a high-risk pregnancy some time later during her pregnancy—this documentation was not performed at the same time point in all women. The time of documentation varied from the first trimester to the late third trimester. However, most of the information was obtained from early pregnancy. Data concerning the cessation of smoking were not registered. A meta-analysis by the CDC showed high variability in cessation rates [25]. The present study did not address smoking cessation, although cessation rates would probably have not altered the results substantially.