
Dr Kate Birchenall
PhD, MRCOG, MSc, MBChB, BSc
Current positions
Honorary Senior Lecturer
Bristol Medical School (THS)
Contact
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Research interests
Dr Kate Birchenall is a Consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist and subspecialist in maternal and fetal medicine and an Honorary Senior Lecturer at the University of Bristol. Her research interests are focused on improving our understanding of the mechanisms involved in human labour and prevention of preterm labour, and she has led on clinical and laboratory-based studies as well as working with larger cohort studies. She is currently Chief Investigator of the NIHR EME funded national RCT to investigate whether the medication Pravastatin reduces preterm birth in those identified as being at risk (https://bristol-trials-centre.bristol.ac.uk/details-of-studies/pioneer/). Other areas she is actively working on include data-linkage projects in the areas of covid and childhood cancers and their effect on fertility and pregnancy, and the effects of climate change on pregnancy. She lectures and supervises in the areas of maternal and fetal health and global maternal health for a variety of undergraduate and postgraduate courses.
Publications
Selected publications
01/11/2022The feto-placental metabolome of spontaneous labour is not reproduced following induction of labour
Placenta
Metabolite Changes in Maternal and Fetal Plasma Following Spontaneous Labour at Term in Humans Using Untargeted Metabolomics Analysis
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Recent publications
01/12/2026Assessing the impact of maternal blood pressure during pregnancy on perinatal health
BMC Medicine
What should be discussed when considering a vaginal birth?
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Characterising the Effects of Genetic Liability to Autoimmune Conditions on Pregnancy Outcomes Using Mendelian Randomization
Failed induction of human labour is associated with an altered myometrial phosphoproteome
Scientific Reports
How should we communicate information regarding birth choices to women?
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology


