| Literature DB >> 29117328 |
Jennifer Hall1, Nadine Hack Adams2, Linda Bartlett3, Anna C Seale4,5, Theresa Lamagni6, Fiorella Bianchi-Jassir4, Joy E Lawn4, Carol J Baker7, Clare Cutland8, Paul T Heath9, Margaret Ip10, Kirsty Le Doare9,11, Shabir A Madhi12,13, Craig E Rubens14,15, Samir K Saha16, Stephanie Schrag17, Ajoke Sobanjo-Ter Meulen18, Johan Vekemans19, Michael G Gravett14,20.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infections such as group B Streptococcus (GBS) are an important cause of maternal sepsis, yet limited data on epidemiology exist. This article, the third of 11, estimates the incidence of maternal GBS disease worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: group B Streptococcus; incidence; postpartum; pregnancy; serotype
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29117328 PMCID: PMC5850000 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cix660
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Figure 1.Maternal group B streptococcal (GBS) disease in disease schema for GBS, as described by Lawn et al [28]. Abbreviations: GBS, group B Streptococcus; NE, neonatal encephalopathy.
Figure 2.Data search and included studies for maternal group B streptococcal disease.
Characteristics of 16 Included Studies
| First Author and Year | Year of Data Collection | Study Location | Study Design | No. of Pregnancies | No. of Live Births | No. of Live and Stillbirths | Inclusion Criteria | Cases of Maternal GBS Disease | Blood Cultures | Diagnosis of Maternal GBS Disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lamagni 2016 [40] | 2014 | All NHS patients in England | National population-based laboratory surveillance linked to hospital admission statistics | 638863 deliveries | 646455 | 649485 | All women receiving NHS care in England | 185 | 185 | Laboratory- confirmed invasive GBS infection as determined through culture of GBS from normally sterile sites |
| Drew 2015 [27] | January 2001– December 2014 | Rotunda Hospital, Dublin, Ireland | Retrospective audit of blood cultures taken from obstetric patients | Not reported | 112361 | Not reported | All clinically significant blood cultures taken from obstetric patients at Rotunda Hospital in the study period | 64 | 64 | Isolation of GBS from blood of an obstetric patient during the period of the audit |
| Kalin 2015 [42] | June 2011– May 2012 | All UK consultant-led maternity units | Secondary analysis of GBS sepsis cases from population-based study (UKOSS facilitated). Case-control study | 799003 maternities | Not reported | Not reported | All mothers delivering in UK hospitals | 7 | 7 | Severe sepsis and GBS isolated from sterile site in unwell mother |
| Knowles 2014 [26] | 1 January 2005–31 December 2012 | Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital and National Maternity Hospital, Dublin | Prospective review of medical records and laboratory data. Case- control study | 136897 pregnancies | 139495 | 139495 | All mothers delivering in CWIUH and NMH | 57 (2 antenatal; 43 intrapartum; 12 postpartum) | 57 | Laboratory- confirmed secondary bloodstream infection |
| O’Higgins 2014 [43] | 1 January 2009–31 December 2012 | Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland | Retrospective audit of blood cultures taken from obstetric patients | 37584 pregnancies – note overlap with Knowles 2014 so excluded from meta-analysis | Not reported | Not reported | Blood cultures taken from obstetric patients which yielded a pathogenic organism and whose medical records were available for review | 15 (10 intrapartum; 5 postpartum) | 15 | Isolation of GBS from the blood of an obstetric patient during the period of the audit |
| Cape 2013 [12] | January 2000– December 2008 | Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts | Retrospective cohort study | 78781 maternities | 81376 | Not reported | Blood cultures taken from obstetric patients at the hospital in the study period; pathogenic organisms only | 8 | 8 | Isolation of GBS from blood of an obstetric patient during hospitalization |
| Surgers 2013 [14] | January 2005– December 2009 | Five teaching hospitals across Paris | Retrospective multicenter audit of positive blood cultures and associated medical records of obstetric patients | 59491 maternities | Not reported | Not reported | Blood cultures taken from obstetric patients which yielded a pathogenic organism and whose medical records were available for review | 19 (17 intrapartum; 2 postpartum) | 19 | Isolation of GBS from the blood of an obstetric patient during the period of the audit |
| Deutscher 2011 [25] | 2007–2009 (exact dates not specified) | California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Tennessee | Multicenter, prospective, active surveillance study | Not reported | 470646 (in 2007) | Not reported | Pregnant and postpartum women aged 15–44 y in surveillance areas with positive blood cultures. No mention of clinical criteria | 99 (42 pre-/ intrapartum; 57 postpartum) | 99 | Isolation of GBS from a sterile site in a surveillance area resident (amniotic fluid and placenta not included) |
| Phares 2008 [22] | January 1999– December 2005 | California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Tennessee | Multicenter, prospective, active surveillance study | Not reported | 454476 | Not reported | 409 | 211 | Isolation of GBS from sterile site in a surveillance-area resident | |
| Schrag 2000 [45] | 1993–1998 (exact dates not specified) | Microbiology laboratories serving acute care hospitals in Maryland, Georgia, California, and Tennessee | Multicenter, prospective, active surveillance study | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | All residents within surveillance areas of any age with GBS isolated from a sterile site (not including placenta or amniotic fluid) | 345 | 221 | Isolation of GBS from a sterile site in a surveillance area resident (amniotic fluid, placenta, and urine excluded) |
| Tyrrell 2000 [23] | 1 January 1996–30 December 1996 | Nine Canadian public health units | Multicenter, prospective, active surveillance study | Not reported | Not reported | Incidence rate of 41/100000 total births | All residents of surveillance area of any age, with GBS isolated from a sterile site. No mention of clinical criteria | 15 | 11 | Isolation of GBS from a sterile site in a surveillance area resident |
| Zaleznik 2000 [26] | January 1993– December 1996 | 12 hospitals in 4 cities in US (Houston, Minneapolis, Seattle, Pittsburgh) | Multicenter, prospective, active surveillance study | Not reported | 157184 | Incidence rate 0.3/1000 deliveries | All mothers delivering at the 4 included hospitals. Cases identified from microbiology laboratory records, febrile women (only 1 of 4 criteria for sepsis) | 54 | 52 | Isolation of GBS from blood or another usually sterile site (except urine) during hospitalization |
| Schwartz 1991 [46] | 1982–1983 | Atlanta, Georgia metropolitan area: all 37 acute care hospitals and independent bacteriology laboratories | Population- based surveillance for invasive GBS disease in adults | Not reported | Incidence of 22 cases/100000 live births | Not reported | Resident of the Atlanta health district from who GBS was isolated from a normally sterile site in 1982 or 1983 | 14 | 9 | Isolation of GBS from a sterile site in a surveillance-area resident |
| Gallagher 1985 [41] | Jan 1980–June 1984 | St Elizabeth Hospital Medical Center, a teaching hospital of northeastern Ohio | Retrospective audit of GBS-positive blood cultures | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Any person from whom GBS was isolated from blood culture specimens between January 1980 and June 1984 at St Elizabeth Hospital Medical Center | 4 | 4 | Isolation of GBS from the blood of any patient during time of audit |
| Pass 1982 [44] | June 1977– December 1979 and June 1977– June 1980 | Cooper Green Hospital and University Hospital, University of Alabama, in Birmingham | Retrospective audit of patients with proven GBS sepsis, also results from prospective study of GBS infections | Not reported | Not reported | Incidence rates of 2.3 and 1.4/1000 deliveries, respectively for University Hospital and Cooper Green Hospital | Patients with proven GBS sepsis (also results for all nonbacteremic GBS infections in obstetric patients) | 21 | 21 | Proven GBS sepsis (not further defined, but all had GBS isolates from blood) |
| Gibbs 1981 [19] | March 1975– June 1979 | Bexar County Teaching Hospitals, San Antonio, Texas | Retrospective audit of aerobic streptococcal infections in obstetric patients | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Patients with streptococcal infections with bacteremia in the hospital’s blood culture results system | 31 | 31 | Streptococcal isolate in 1 or more blood cultures accompanied by clinical signs of infection |
Abbreviations: CWIUH, Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital; GBS, group B Streptococcus; NHS, National Health Service; NMH, National Maternity Hospital, Dublin; UK, United Kingdom; UKOSS, UK Obstetric Surveillance System; US, United States.
Figure 3.Geographic distribution of data on maternal group B streptococcal (GBS) disease that met inclusion criteria.
Figure 4.Meta-analysis of the incidence of maternal group B streptococcal disease, split by denominator of women delivering (4 studies, N = 1576138) or total pregnancies (1 study, n = 150043). Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ES, effect size; GBS, group B Streptococcus.
Figure 5.Meta-analysis of the incidence of maternal GBS disease, split by severe sepsis (1 study, n = 799003) or sepsis (3 studies, N = 777135). Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ES, effect size; GBS, group B Streptococcus.
Figure 6.Group B Streptococcus (GBS) serotypes causing maternal GBS disease (5 studies, N = 310). Serotypes included in a pentavalent vaccine are shown in blue shades.
Key Findings and Implications
| What’s new about this? |
| What was the main finding? |
| How can the data be improved? |
| What does it mean for policy and programs? |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; GBS, group B Streptococcus; IAP, intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis.