| Literature DB >> 28558777 |
Mark A Katz1,2, Bradford D Gessner3,4, Jeanene Johnson5,6, Becky Skidmore7, Marian Knight8, Niranjan Bhat9, Helen Marshall10,11, David J Horne12,13, Justin R Ortiz14, Deshayne B Fell15,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) considers pregnant women to be a risk group for severe influenza disease. We conducted a systematic review to evaluate influenza disease incidence in pregnant women in order to inform estimates of influenza vaccine impact for low-resource countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28558777 PMCID: PMC5450114 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-017-1333-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1Flow diagram of systematic literature review of influenza illness in pregnancy
Summary of studies identified in systematic literature review of Incidence of influenza virus infection among pregnant women
| Study | Outcome assesseda | Pandemic or seasonal | Study Design | Methodology | Denominator calculation | Dates of surveillance | Lab Test | Country (WHO Region) b | Country Income Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creanga 2010 | HA, ICU, D | Pandemic | Case series | Retrospective chart review: pregnant women hospitalized with confirmed H1N1 identified through “enhanced surveillance.” Testing performance only when requested by hospital. | Estimation using 2007 vital registration data (similar approach as in Jamieson et al.) | 05/01/2009–06/30/2009 | RT-PCR | US (PAHO) | High |
| Doyle 2013 | SI, HA, ICU, D | Pandemic | Case series | Cases of pH1N1-confirmed acute respiratory illness reported by health providers to state of Florida | Florida birth registry data | 04/24/2009–05/31/2010 | RT-PCR or viral culture | US (PAHO) | High |
| Griffiths 1980 | I | Seasonal | Cohort | Serological testing of women “booked” for antenatal care at one hospital in England during three years. Only women with postpartum specimens available were included. | Number of study participants | 05/1975–11/1975; | HI serology with 4-fold rise in antibody titer | UK (EURO) | High |
| Hardy 1961 | I | Pandemic | Cohort | All pregnant women treated at Johns Hopkins Obstetrical Prenatal Clinic, with blood samples taken and questionnaires about symptoms administered monthly through delivery. Anyone with high HI titer was considered a case. | Number of study participants | 10/14/1957–02/01/1958 | Complement Complement fixation or HI test; no increase in titers required to be considered a case | US (PAHO) | High |
| Irving 2000 | I | Seasonal | Cohort | Women delivering at two hospitals in Nottingham, England with available antenatal and postnatal sera. | Number of study participants | 05/1993–07/1994 | Single radial hemolysis and paired specimens for HI titer | UK (EURO) | High |
| Jamieson 2009 | SI, HA, ICU, D | Pandemic | Case series | Pregnant women with confirmed or probable H1 infection reported by states to CDC as part of “enhanced” surveillance. | US Census bureau data | 04/15/2009–05/18/2009 | Confirmed: RT-PCR or viral culture+for H1. Probable: RT-PCR flu A+ but (−) for known subtypes | US (PAHO) | High |
| Knight 2011 | ICU, D | Pandemic | Case series | Cases of H1 lab-confirmed ICU admission among pregnant women in Australia and New Zealand reported to Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care (ANZIC) study. Cases in UK reported to UK Obstetric Surveillance System. | National statistics on pregnancies combined with total birth data | AUS/NZ: | Not stated in manuscript (but referenced) | Australia and New Zealand (WPRO) | High |
| Madhi 2014 | SI | Seasonal | Randomized Clinical trial | RCT of influenza vaccine efficacy. All participants with ILI or unknown respiratory illness were tested for influenza. | All women enrolled in placebo arm of study | 03/2011–08/2011; | RT-PCR | South Africa (AFRO) | Upper-Middle |
| Yates 2010c | HA, ICU, D | Pandemic | Case series | Clinician-reported of H1-confirmed pregnant women admitted to 221/223 hospitals with consultant-led maternity units in the UK. Surveillance included zero-reporting and follow-up of reported cases. | Birth data from UK office for national statistics | 09/01/2009–01/31/2010 | Not specified | UK (EURO) | High |
aOutcomes are abbreviated as follows: I Infection, SI Symptomatic Infection, HA Hospital admission, ICU ICU admission, D Death
bWHO regions are abbreviated as follows: PAHO Americas, EURO Europe, AFRO Africa, WPRO Western Pacific
cThe Yates study described same population as described in Knight study; therefore only Knight study results were included in the ICU and death tables
Summary of studies reporting reporting incidence of influenza virus infection using serology
| Study | Number of cases | Denominator | Crude incidence rate (CI) | 95% CI | Pandemic or seasonal? | Study design | Grading system and scoreb | Hospital-basSummary of studies reporting repored or clinic-based? | Duration of surveillance (months or years) | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griffiths 1980 | 77 | 1,595 | 483 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (399–614) | Seasonal | Cohort | NOS = 7 | Hospital | 3 years (22 months total influenza season) | UK |
| Hardy 1961 | 61 | 671 | 909 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (716–1,155) | Pandemic | Cohort | NOS = 6 | Clinic | 5 months | US |
| Irving 2000 | 182 | 1,659 | 1,097 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (957–1,258) | Seasonal | Cohort | NOS = 7 | Hospital | 15 months | UK |
aCalculated from provided number of cases or %
b NOS Newcastle-Ottawa Scale
Fig. 2a Forest plot showing distribution of incidence of influenza virus infectionof any kind from serology studies in pregnant women, per 10,000 pregnancies, with 95% confidence intervals. b Forest plot showing distribution of incidence of symptomatic influenza virus infections in pregnant women, per 10,000 pregnancies, with 95% confidence intervals. c Forest plot showing distribution of incidence of influenza-associated hospital admissions in pregnant women, per 10,000 pregnancies, with 95% confidence intervals. d Forest plot showing distribution of incidence of influenza-associated ICU admissions in pregnant women, per 10,000 pregnancies, with 95% confidence intervals. e Forest plot showing distribution of incidence of influenza-associated deaths in pregnant women, per 10,000 pregnancies, with 95% confidence intervals
Summary of studies reporting incidence of symptomatic influenza virus infection
| Study | Number of cases | Denominator | Crude incidence rate (CI) | 95% CI | Pandemic or seasonal? | Study design | Grading system and scoreb | Hospital-based or clinic-based? | Duration of surveillance (months or years) | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doyle 2013 | 194 | 295,941 | 6.6 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (5.70–7.55) | Pandemic | Case series | NOS = 8 | Both | 13 months | US |
| Jamieson 2009 | 34 | 3,392,060 | 0.10 per 10,000 pregnancies | (0.07–0.14) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Both | 1 month | US |
| Madhi 2014 | HIV uninfected: | 1,023 | 371 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (272–507) | Seasonal | Clinical trial | Low Risk (Cochrane) | Clinic | 2 years (9 months total influenza season) | South Africa |
| HIV infected: | 88 | 1,818 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (1,167–2,832) | |||||||
| Total: | 1,111 | 486 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (375–630) |
aCalculated from provided number of cases or %
b NOS Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, JBI JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Descriptive/Case Series, Cochrane The Cochrane Collaboration’s tool for assessing risk of bias in randomised trials
Summary of studies reporting incidence of influenza-associated hospital admission
| Study | Number of cases | Denominator | Crude incidence rate (CI) | 95% CI | Pandemic or seasonal? | Study design | Grading system and scoreb | Hospital-based or clinic-based? | Duration of surveillance (months or years) | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jamieson 2009 | 14 | 3,392,060 | 0.04 per 10,000 pregnancies | (0.02–0.07) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Both | 1 month | US |
| Creanga 2010 | 63 | 113,877 | 5.5 per 10,000 pregnancies | (4.25–7.08) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Hospital | 2 months | US |
| Yates 2010 | 241 | 314,135 | 7.7 per 10,000 pregnancies | (6.7–8.7) | Pandemic | Case series | NOS = 9 | Hospital | 5 months | UK |
| Doyle 2013 | 170 | 295,941 | 5.7 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (4.94–6.68) | Pandemic | Case series | NOS = 8 | Both | 13 months | US |
aCalculated from provided number of cases or %
b NOS Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, JBI JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Descriptive/Case Series
Summary of studies reporting incidence of influenza-associated ICU admission
| Study | Number of cases | Denominator | Crude incidence rate (CI) | 95% CI | Pandemic or seasonal? | Study design | Grading system and scoreb | Hospital-based or clinic-based? | Duration of surveillance (months or years) | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jamieson 2009 | 3 | 3,392,060 | 0.01 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (0.00–0.03) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Both | 1 month | US |
| Creanga 2010 | 8 | 113,877 | 0.70 per 10,000 pregnancies | (0.30–1.38) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Hospital | 2 months | US |
| Doyle 2013 | 9 | 295,941 | 0.30 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (0.16–0.58) | Pandemic | Case series | NOS = 8 | Both | 13 months | US |
| Knight 2011 | 59 | 86,449 | 6.8 per 10,000 | (5.2–8.8) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Hospital | 3 months | Australia/New Zealand |
| 57 | 332,569 | 1.7 per 10,000 | (1.3–2.2) | 5 months | UK | |||||
| Peak: 51 | 193,796 | 2.6 per 10,000 pregnancies | (2.0–3.5) | 3 months | UK |
aCalculated from provided number of cases or %
b NOS Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, JBI JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Descriptive/Case Series, Cochrane The Cochrane Collaboration’s tool for assessing risk of bias in randomised trials
Summary of studies reporting incidence of influenza-associated deaths
| Study | Number of cases | Denominator | Crude incidence rate (CI) | 95% CI | Pandemic or seasonal? | Study design | Grading system and scoreb | Hospital-based or clinic-based? | Inclusion criteria | Duration of surveillance (months or years) | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jamieson 2009 | 1 | 3,392,060 | 0.003 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (0.000–0.021) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Both | Pregnant women with laboratory-confirmed (PCR or culture) H1N1 | 1 month | US |
| Creanga 2010 | 2 | 113,877 | 0.18 per 10,000 pregnancies | (0.04–0.70) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Hospital | Reproductive-aged women with rtPCR-confirmed H1N1 hospitalized in NYC | 2 months | US |
| Knight 2011 | 6 | 86,449 | 0.69 per 10,000 pregnancies | (0.26–1.51) | Pandemic | Case series | JBI = 6/7 | Hospital | Confirmed AH1N1v infection during pregnancy and subsequently admitted to ICU | 5 months | Australia/New Zealand |
| Doyle 2013 | 8 | 295,941 | 0.27 per 10,000 pregnanciesa | (0.14–0.54) | Pandemic | Case series | NOS = 8 | Both | Acute respiratory illness, with laboratory | 13 months | US |
aCalculated from provided number of cases or %
b NOS Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, JBI JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Descriptive/Case Series