Lies, Damned Lies, and Miscarriage Statistics

Trying to figure out your chances of miscarrying? Sadly, you are going to have a hard time finding good information. 

Many websites claim to tell you your risk of miscarriage, citing statistics that look like these:

Chart shows commonly stated chances of miscarriage by pregnancy week. For 1-2 weeks, the chances are 75%. For weeks 3-6 the chances are 10%. For weeks 6-12 the chances are 5%, and for weeks 12-20, the chances drop to 3%.
Commonly reported chances of miscarriage by pregnancy week

But problems abound with their numbers.

Problem 1: These sites rarely provide their sources, so you cannot tell whether their information is reliable.

Problem 2: These sites do not breakdown miscarriage risk by other known risk factors, like the mother’s age.

Problem 3: Nearly all these sites derive their statistics from just two small studies, one which tracked 222 women from conception through just the first 6 weeks of pregnancy, and another which tracked 697 pregnancies, but only after a fetal heartbeat had been detected–a key point, because heartbeat detection dramatically lowers the chances of a miscarriage.

The lack of good information frustrated me when I was pregnant, and I bet it frustrates you too. So I have compiled a summary of the best research on risk of miscarriage. Where possible, I break down the risk by…

Edit: I also have a new post on how morning sickness signals a lower risk.

Risk of Miscarriage by Pregnancy Week

Miscarriage risk drops as pregnancy progresses. The risk is highest early in the first trimester. Fortunately, for most women by 14 weeks their chance of a miscarriage is less than 1%.

Miscarriages rates declined between 6 to 10 weeks, according to a study of 697 pregnancies with a confirmed fetal heartbeat:

  • 9.4% at 6 weeks
  • 4.6% at 7 weeks
  • 1.5% at 8 weeks
  • 0.5% at 9 weeks
  • 0.7% at 10 weeks

A similar study of 668 pregnancies with a confirmed fetal heartbeat between 6 and 10 weeks, found a similar decline in miscarriage risk by week:

  • 10.3% at 6 weeks
  • 7.9% at 7 weeks
  • 7.4% at 8 weeks
  • 3.1% at 9 weeks

But for women in their mid to late 30s and early 40s, these studies understate the risk. Even after confirmation of a fetal heartbeat, miscarriage risk remains high for women 40 and older through 12 weeks, according to a study of 384 women 35 and older. 

For women ages 35 to 37, the chance of miscarrying at 12 weeks is 2.8%. By ages 37 to 39, this rises to 7.5%. At 40 and up, the chance is 10.8%.
Chance of miscarriage by 12 weeks but after confirmation of a fetal heart rate by the mother’s age.

Despite the higher risk for this age group overall, a normal ultrasound result from 7 weeks remains a promising sign. Women who entered the study in their 4th to 5th week of pregnancy had about a 35% risk of miscarriage. Women who entered the study later, and who therefore had a normal ultrasound and heartbeat at 7-10 weeks, had a risk under 10%.

Miscarriage Risk by Fetal Heart Rate

A fetal heartbeat often indicates a healthy, viable pregnancy. But a fetal heart rate that is too slow can instead signal an impending miscarriage.

The chance of a first trimester miscarriage varies by fetal heart rate, according to a study of 809 pregnancies. The lower the heart rate, the higher the miscarriage risk. (Normal fetal heart rates change with fetal age, so these tables break down the risk by pregnancy week.)

Up to 6 weeks 2 days gestation:

Chart showing the chances of miscarriage by fetal heart rate. The chance ranges from 11% for heart rates above 100 beats per minute to 100% for below 80 beats per minute.
Chance of miscarriage by fetal heart rate up to 6 weeks 2 days of gestation.

Between 6 weeks 3 days and 7 weeks 0 days:

Chart showing how the chances of miscarriage rise with a slow fetal heart rate at 7 weeks gestation. For heart rates above 120 beats per minute, the chance of miscarriage is 6.5%. For rates between 110-119, the chance is 18%. For rates between 101-109, the chance is 43%. For rates below 100 beats per minute, the chance of a miscarriage is 100%.
Chance of miscarriage by fetal heart rate at 7 weeks gestation

After 7 weeks, the fetal heart rate was at or above 120 beats per minute for almost all ongoing pregnancies.

Miscarriage Risk by Week Before Confirmation of a Heartbeat

Many women will not have an ultrasound and fetal heartbeat confirmation until sometime between 8-10 weeks. What are their chances of a miscarriage before that crucial piece of news?

In a large prospective study of 4,887 women trying to conceive, 4070 became pregnant. Their rate of miscarriage was 4-5% in week 6. By week 7, this risk fell to 2.5%. Rates hovered around 2% per week until week 13, when chances of a miscarriage dipped below 1%

Chart shows the chances of miscarriage by week in the "Right from the Start" study, which was conducted between 2000 and 2009. The graph shows the chances differ slightly by race. Black women are slightly more likely than white women to miscarry for at least up to 20 weeks gestation.

Personal Risk Factors

Your personal characteristics and behaviors alter your miscarriage risk. The most important risk factor, as is well known, is the woman’s age: Miscarriage rates climb as women age, especially after the late 30s. The man’s age matters too, especially after they turn 40.

Risk of Miscarriage by the Woman’s Age

Anne-Marie Nybo Anderson, of the Danish Epidemiology Science Centre led the largest population-based study ever conducted on age and miscarriage. Anderson tracked every “reproductive outcome”– every pregnancy, miscarriage, birth, stillbirth, or abortion–in Denmark between the years of 1978 and 1992–ultimately tracking outcomes of over a million pregnancies.

What did she find? Miscarriage risk rises sharply during a woman’s late 30s and reached nearly 100% by age 45.

Line graph shows a rise in the risk of pregnancy loss starting at around 35, with a steep rise beginning around age 40.
Risk of pregnancy loss by the mother’s age at conception.

Rates of ectopic pregnancy also rose with age:

Line graph show a sharp increase in the rate of ectopic pregnancy with advancing age, from under 2% of all pregnancies at age 25 to 7% at age 40.
Risk of ectopic pregnancy by the mother’s age

As did the chances of a stillbirth:

Line graph showing how the risk of a stillbirth rises from roughly 1 in 200 in one's 30s to nearly 1 in 100 at age 45.
Risk of stillbirth by the mother’s age at conception

(In Anderson’s study, stillbirth was defined as a loss after 28 weeks. In the U.S., any loss after 20 weeks is usually considered a stillbirth)

Take heart though: as scary as the rise in stillbirths sounds, the risk remains under 1% through age 45.

Anderson’s study’s findings parallel those of another large and well-studied sample: U.S. pregnancies conceived via IVF.

Line graph shows the risk of miscarriage following IVF by the mother's age. The risk remains below 20% until after 37. It begins to climb at age 38, and reaches 60% by age 45.
Data from the Centers from Disease Control’s report on all 2010 IVF cycles.

Just as in Anderson’s study of Danish pregnancies, the uptick in miscarriage risk among IVF pregnancies begins at age 38.

Intriguingly, the overall miscarriage rates among IVF pregnancies is lower than in the Denmark sample. This is probably due to selection effects. Only some women manage to become pregnant through IVF, and embryos transferred during IVF are chosen based on early signs of normal development. Passing through these early hurdles likely ups the odds of a successful pregnancy.

Risk of Miscarriage by the Man’s Age

Researchers often ignore the man’s age when studying miscarriage. Most women marry men who are about the same age, so researchers have trouble teasing apart the effects of the woman’s age from the man’s age. 

Fortunately, several studies have now included couples in which either the woman or the man is much older than their partner.

These studies provide a clear and consistent picture: older prospective fathers raise the risk of miscarriage by about 25-50%. One study found an a 60% increase in the odds of a miscarriage if the father was over 40. Another reported a roughly 25% increase in the risk of miscarriage for fathers over the age of 35.

Line graph showing how the father's age interacts with the mother's age to increase the risk of miscarriage. Fathers over age 35 lead to a slightly higher risk of miscarriage for women between the ages of 20 to 40.

Other studies report similar effects; all showing most marked rise after age 40 (see here and here).

Risk by the Couple’s Combined Age 

A young partner can offset some of your personal age-based miscarriage risk, especially if you are a man. Men whose partners are young, under 30, have relatively low chances of miscarriage regardless of their own age, according to large retrospective European study.

For women, alas, young partner only partially offset their age-based risk. Women over 35 with relatively young partners, under age 40, still face double to triple the odds of women in their 20s.

Older partners do, however, compound the risk for women in their 30s. A woman in her early 30s with a partner over 40 has roughly triple the odds of a woman with a partner the same age or younger. 

Risk of Miscarriage After Confirmation of a Fetal Heartbeat for Older Women

On a more positive note, women in their late 30s and early 40s have a good chance of an ongoing pregnancy after confirmation of fetal heartbeat.

For women over 40, once a heartbeat has been detected at 7-10 weeks, the risk of a miscarriage falls to around 10%. After 20 weeks, the risk plummets to less than 1%.

For women ages 35 to 37, the chance of miscarrying at 12 weeks is 2.8%. By ages 37 to 39, this rises to 7.5%. At 40 and up, the chance is 10.8%.
Chance of miscarriage by 12 weeks but after confirmation of a fetal heart rate by the mother’s age.

How Does a Prior Miscarriage Affect Your Risk of Miscarriage?

Aside from age, the best predictor of whether a woman will miscarry is the number miscarriages she has already suffered. Most websites quote these statistics:

This table shows the chances of miscarriage following one or more prior miscarriages. After 1 prior miscarriage, the chance of a second is 10-15%. After 2, the risk rises to 40%. After 3, it rises to 60%. And after 4, the risk is nearly 100%.

From these statistics, one prior miscarriage seems inconsequential; while just two prior miscarriages appears to dramatically raise your chances of another miscarriage.

Fortunately, these statistics are too dire for women who have had two prior miscarriages. The outcomes from a study over a million pregnancies paints a much more reassuring picture, at least for women who have had fewer than 3 prior miscarriages

Here’s the risk of a subsequent miscarriage for women who have never given birth before:

This line graph shows how the chances of miscarriage climb after repeated miscarriages and with age. The risk climbs substantially after the third miscarriage.

And for women who have given birth before:

Line graph shows that the risk of a subsequent miscarriage is higher after 3 prior miscarriages, but lower than among women with three prior miscarriages who have never given birth before.

The Bottom Line

In early pregnancy, miscarriage risk falls with each passing week, with significant drops around the 7-week mark, and again after the 12-week mark.

Your age, your partner’s age, and your number of prior miscarriages all affect your overall risk of miscarriage. Miscarriage risk rises dramatically after about age 37 for women, and age 40 for men.

References

Ammon Avalos, L., Galindo, C. and Li, D.-K. (2012), A systematic review to calculate background miscarriage rates using life table analysis. Birth Defects Research Part A: Clinical and Molecular Teratology, 94: 417–423. doi: 10.1002/bdra.23014

Cohen-Overbeek TE, Hop WC, den Ouden M, Pijpers L, Jahoda MG, Wladimiroff JW. Spontaneous abortion rate and advanced maternal age: consequences for prenatal diagnosis. Lancet. 1990 Jul 7;336(8706):27-9.

Doubilet PM, Benson CB. Embryonic heart rate in the early first trimester: what rate is normal? J Ultrasound Med. 1995 Jun;14(6):431-4.

Kleinhaus K, Perrin M, Friedlander Y, Paltiel O, Malaspina D, Harlap S. Paternal age and spontaneous abortion. Obstet Gynecol. 2006 Aug;108(2):369-77.

Makrydimas, G., Sebire, N. J., Lolis, D., Vlassis, N. and Nicolaides, K. H. (2003), Fetal loss following ultrasound diagnosis of a live fetus at 6–10 weeks of gestation. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol, 22: 368–372. doi: 10.1002/uog.204

Mukherjee S, Velez Edwards DR, Baird DD, Savitz DA, Hartmann KE. Risk of miscarriage among black women and white women in a U.S. Prospective Cohort Study. Am J Epidemiol. 2013 Jun 1;177(11):1271-8. doi: 10.1093/aje/kws393.

de la Rochebrochard E, Thonneau P. Paternal age and maternal age are risk factors for miscarriage; results of a multicentre European study. Hum Reprod. 2002 Jun;17(6):1649-56

Slama R, Bouyer J, Windham G, Fenster L, Werwatz A, Swan SH. Influence of paternal age on the risk of spontaneous abortion. Am J Epidemiol. 2005 May 1;161(9):816-23.

Tong S, Kaur A, Walker SP, Bryant V, Onwude JL, Permezel M. Miscarriage risk for asymptomatic women after a normal first-trimester prenatal visit. Obstet Gynecol. 2008 Mar;111(3):710-4. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0b013e318163747c.

Wilcox AJ, Weinberg CR, O’Connor JF, Baird DD, Schlatterer JP, Canfield RE, Armstrong EG, Nisula BC. Incidence of early loss of pregnancy. N Engl J Med. 1988 Jul 28;319(4):189-94.

 

Author: Amy Kiefer

As a former research scientist and proud mama of three little munchkins, I love digging into the research on all things baby-related and sharing it with my readers.

161 thoughts on “Lies, Damned Lies, and Miscarriage Statistics”

  1. Do you have any information on the current rates of miscarriage in Mo/Di twin pregnancies? I know that they are considerably more risky, but also that the rates of loss are dropping with more medical interventions.

  2. Ahhhh statistics! Here’s one for you. I’m 45. My husband is 53. We conceived our first baby the first month we tried, naturally, when I was 40 and he was 48. The pregnancy was healthy and easy. Our baby was born when I was 41 years old, she was born without complication at 42 weeks – a very healthy baby! She just turned four years old this week and is extraordinarily healthy, happy, and bright! I am now 45, and we once again conceived (naturally) within a couple months of trying. Once again I’m enjoying a fit, active, comfortable, happy, healthy pregnancy. The DNA blood tests and ultrasound scans all show a very healthy 31 week old baby girl (thank God!) she is due this Christmas, and our four year old is so excited to be a big sister. I am not a statistic, nor do I take my health for granted. I am thankful for my good health EVERY DAY and take good care of myself so as not to take this gift of health for granted. Ladies… take care of yourselves and I wish you all the best. Don’t stress! Get whatever tests you need to get, of course. I got the extra DNA tests and fetal non-stress monitoring, etc. I let them check me via U/S to ensure I had enough fluid and my placenta was still healthy at the last week of my pregnancy… I did not reject science or medicine, but I also didn’t freak out over the statistics and I had faith in my body. Don’t add stress to your load.

    1. THIS!! I’m 40 and 17 weeks pregnant, had my daughter at 39. Both conceived naturally and with no trouble, my husband and I are both athletes and committed to a healthy lifestyle. I hate outdated AMA stats and beliefs to no end, and this article made me sad to think that others might be sacred from this terrible use of old information.

  3. I just wanted to add that the chart about miscarriage by heart rate is taken from a study where “two hundred forty pregnant women presented with first-trimester threatened abortion” This means they presented with vaginal bleeding which can be (but not necessarily) mean that the person is in the process of miscarrying. Therefore these heart rate cut offs may not be applicable for a heart rate found during a regular check up.

  4. This is a good article but there are some misleading statements:

    Women who entered the study in their 4th to 5th week of pregnancy had about a 35% risk of miscarriage.

    So someone who is 5 weeks pregnant has a 35% risk of miscarriage. Is this correct? Many would find this deeply worrying.

    The chart showing maternal age and risk up to 12 weeks. A 37 year old has simultaneously a 2.8% chance of miscarriage and a 7.5% chance of miscarriage.

    I appreciate this is one of the more in depth articles on the subject and well presented in most parts but if you’re going to set things straight, set them straight.

  5. Thank you so much for this invaluable information. I wonder if the studies show the difference between older women using their own egg vs, say, the egg of a 30 year old donor? (Ie to what extent is the increased risk due to egg quality affected by age vs other factors?)

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