| Literature DB >> 27572968 |
Anna C Seale1,2, Angela C Koech2, Anna E Sheppard3, Hellen C Barsosio2, Joyce Langat2, Emily Anyango2, Stella Mwakio2, Salim Mwarumba2, Susan C Morpeth2,4, Kirimi Anampiu2, Alison Vaughan3, Adam Giess3, Polycarp Mogeni2, Leahbell Walusuna2, Hope Mwangudzah2, Doris Mwanzui5, Mariam Salim5, Bryn Kemp2,6, Caroline Jones1,2,4, Neema Mturi2, Benjamin Tsofa2, Edward Mumbo7, David Mulewa7, Victor Bandika8, Musimbi Soita9, Maureen Owiti5, Norris Onzere5, A Sarah Walker3, Stephanie J Schrag10, Stephen H Kennedy6, Greg Fegan1,2, Derrick W Crook3, James A Berkley1,2.
Abstract
Streptococcus agalactiae (group B streptococcus, GBS) causes neonatal disease and stillbirth, but its burden in sub-Saharan Africa is uncertain. We assessed maternal recto-vaginal GBS colonization (7,967 women), stillbirth and neonatal disease. Whole-genome sequencing was used to determine serotypes, sequence types and phylogeny. We found low maternal GBS colonization prevalence (934/7,967, 12%), but comparatively high incidence of GBS-associated stillbirth and early onset neonatal disease (EOD) in hospital (0.91 (0.25-2.3)/1,000 births and 0.76 (0.25-1.77)/1,000 live births, respectively). However, using a population denominator, EOD incidence was considerably reduced (0.13 (0.07-0.21)/1,000 live births). Treated cases of EOD had very high case fatality (17/36, 47%), especially within 24 h of birth, making under-ascertainment of community-born cases highly likely, both here and in similar facility-based studies. Maternal GBS colonization was less common in women with low socio-economic status, HIV infection and undernutrition, but when GBS-colonized, they were more probably colonized by the most virulent clone, CC17. CC17 accounted for 267/915 (29%) of maternal colonizing (265/267 (99%) serotype III; 2/267 (0.7%) serotype IV) and 51/73 (70%) of neonatal disease cases (all serotype III). Trivalent (Ia/II/III) and pentavalent (Ia/Ib/II/III/V) vaccines would cover 71/73 (97%) and 72/73 (99%) of disease-causing serotypes, respectively. Serotype IV should be considered for inclusion, with evidence of capsular switching in CC17 strains.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27572968 PMCID: PMC4936517 DOI: 10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.67
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 17.745