| Literature DB >> 29117332 |
Anna C Seale1,2, Fiorella Bianchi-Jassir1, Neal J Russell1,3, Maya Kohli-Lynch1,4, Cally J Tann1,5, Jenny Hall6, Lola Madrid1,7, Hannah Blencowe1, Simon Cousens1, Carol J Baker8, Linda Bartlett9, Clare Cutland10, Michael G Gravett11,12, Paul T Heath13, Margaret Ip14, Kirsty Le Doare13,15, Shabir A Madhi16,17, Craig E Rubens11,18, Samir K Saha19, Stephanie J Schrag20, Ajoke Sobanjo-Ter Meulen21, Johan Vekemans22, Joy E Lawn1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We aimed to provide the first comprehensive estimates of the burden of group B Streptococcus (GBS), including invasive disease in pregnant and postpartum women, fetal infection/stillbirth, and infants. Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis is the current mainstay of prevention, reducing early-onset infant disease in high-income contexts. Maternal GBS vaccines are in development.Entities:
Keywords: group B Streptococcus; infection; maternal; newborn; stillbirth
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29117332 PMCID: PMC5849940 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cix664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Figure 1.Overview of the articles in this supplement to estimate the worldwide burden of group B Streptococcus. Adapted from Lawn et al [15]. Abbreviations: GBS, group B Streptococcus; NE, neonatal encephalopathy.
Figure 2.Disease schema for outcomes of maternal group B Streptococcus colonization showing worldwide estimates for 2015. Adapted from Lawn et al [15]. Abbreviations: GBS, group B Streptococcus; NE, neonatal encephalopathy.
Figure 3.Compartmental model for estimating cases of infant group B streptococcal disease, deaths, and disability. Abbreviations: EOGBS, early-onset group B Streptococcus; GBS, group B Streptococcus; IAP, intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis; LOGBS, late-onset group B Streptococcus.
Data Inputs to the Compartmental Model to Estimate Cases of Infant Group B Streptococcal Disease, Deaths, and Disability
| Asia | Africa | Oceania | Latin America and Caribbean | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Southern Asia | Eastern Asia | Central Asia | West Asia | SE Asia | Northern Africa | Southern Africa | Eastern Africa | Western Africa | Mid. Africa | Oceania | Caribbean | Central America | South America | Developed | |||
| No. of countries | 9 | 4 | 5 | 18 | 11 | 6 | 5 | 18 | 16 | 9 | 14 | 13 | 8 | 12 | 47 | ||
| No. of live births in 2015 | 37M | 18M | 1.6M | 5.8M | 12.3M | 6.1M | 1.2M | 13.9M | 13.4M | 6.0M | 0.03M | 0.7M | 0.3M | 7.0M | 13.4M | ||
| Step 1 | |||||||||||||||||
| Percentage of infants exposed to maternal GBS at birth [ | Countries | 4 | 3 | 0 | 5 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 11 | 21 | ||
| Datasets | 44 | 41 | 32 | 14 | 8 | 7 | 22 | 18 | 3 | 1 | 5 | 6 | 35 | 83 | |||
| Pregnant women | 15838 | 63289 | 15124 | 3591 | 1576 | 13218 | 14071 | 4860 | 2058 | 440 | 1137 | 3229 | 16141 | 144604 | |||
| 12.5 (10.2–14.8) | 11.1 (9.9– 12.4) | 14.7 (12.1–17.4) | 14.4 (11.5–17.4) | 22.9 (17.0–28.2) | 28.9 (26.6–31.2) | 19.4 (15.9–23.0) | 17.5 (10.8–24.1) | 23.9 (14.7–33.1) | 34.7 (29.5–39.9) | 17.1 (13.2–21.0) | 18.4 (15.5–21.3) | 19.2 [17.7–20.7] | |||||
| Step2 | IAP policy [ | Countries | 28 | 20 | 11 | 31 | |||||||||||
| IAP group where known | Group 2 = 1; group 3 = 1; group 4 = 26 | Group 2 = 1; group 4 = 19 | Group 1 = 4; group 3 = 1; group 4 = 6 | Group 1 = 21; group 2 = 7; group 4 = 3 | |||||||||||||
| Datasets | 14 (from varying IAP policy contexts in 8 countries) | ||||||||||||||||
| GBS cases | 85 | ||||||||||||||||
| By IAP policy | Group 1 = 0.003 (0.0–0.009); group 2 = 0.006 (0.001–0.012); group 3 = 0.009 (0.004–0.015); group 4 = 0.011 (0.006–0.015) | ||||||||||||||||
| Ratio of EOGBS to LOGBS [ | Countries | 3 | 6 | 3 | 12 | ||||||||||||
| Datasets | 4 | 7 | 3 | 13 | |||||||||||||
| GBS cases | 123 | 1352 | 50 | 3217 | |||||||||||||
| 5.60 (2.40–14.9) | 1.02 (0.82–1.07) | 1.90 (0.98–3.69) | 1.82 (1.29–2.57) | ||||||||||||||
| Proportion of meningitis cases in EOGBS [ | Countries | 30 | |||||||||||||||
| Datasets | 26 | ||||||||||||||||
| Meningitis cases | 176 | ||||||||||||||||
| 0.12 (0.08–0.15) | |||||||||||||||||
| Proportion of meningitis cases in [ | Countries | 17 | |||||||||||||||
| Datasets | 18 | ||||||||||||||||
| Meningitis cases | 689 | ||||||||||||||||
| 0.42 (0.30–0.55) | |||||||||||||||||
| Step 3 | Case fatality risk in EOGBS without skilled birth attendance 0.9 (0.3–1.0) estimated | ||||||||||||||||
| Case fatality risk (proportion) in EOGBS in a facility [ | Countries | 8 | 5 | 7 | 18 | ||||||||||||
| Datasets | 12 | 6 | 9 | 19 | |||||||||||||
| Deaths | 36 | 131 | 15 | 123 | |||||||||||||
| 0.14 (0.06–0.23) | 0.27 (0.15–0.37) | 0.17 (0.05–0.30) | 0.05 (0.04–0.07) | ||||||||||||||
| Case fatality risk (proportion) of LOGBS [ | Countries | 3 | 5 | 3 | 14 | ||||||||||||
| Datasets | 6 | 5 | 14 | 3 | |||||||||||||
| Deaths | 12 | 116 | 3 | 67 | |||||||||||||
| 0.05 (0.02–0.09) | 0.12 (0.05–0.19) | 0.06 (0–0.19) | 0.04 (0.03–0.06) | ||||||||||||||
| Step 4 | NDI risk (proportion) in infant meningitis (EOGBS and LOGBS) [ | Countries | 4 | ||||||||||||||
| Datasets | 12 | ||||||||||||||||
| Cases | 80 | ||||||||||||||||
| 0.18 (0.13–0.22) | |||||||||||||||||
Data in parentheses represent the 95% confidence interval.
Abbreviations: EOGBS, early-onset group B Streptococcus; GBS, group B Streptococcus; IAP, intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis; LOGBS, late-onset group B Streptococcus; NDI, neurodevelopmental impairment.
Estimated Cases of Maternal, Fetal, and Infant Group B Streptococcal Disease in 2015
| Region | Maternal GBS Disease | Fetal Infectiona | EOGBS Disease | LOGBS Disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Southern Asia | 8700 | 9700 | 42500 | 7600 |
| (4000–14000) | (1200–21300) | (23000–65400) | (0–57000) | |
| Eastern Asia | 4100 | 1300 | 21900 | 3900 |
| (1700–6700) | (0–2300) | (12700–32900) | (0–30000) | |
| Central Asia | 400 | 200 | 2300 | 400 |
| (200–600) | (0–400) | (1300–3200) | (0–3000) | |
| Western Asia | 1300 | 800 | 9200 | 1600 |
| (600–2200) | (0–1700) | (5100–13800) | (0–12400) | |
| South-Eastern Asia | 2900 | 1500 | 19400 | 3500 |
| (1200–4600) | (0–3300) | (10800—28700) | (0–43200) | |
| Asia | 35900 | 13400 | 95300 | 17000 |
| (7100–28100) | (1200–29600) | (52800–142900) | (0–145600) | |
| Oceania | 60 | 40 | 400 | 100 |
| (20–100) | (0–100) | (10800–28700) | (0–43100) | |
| Northern Africa | 1400 | 3900 | 15400 | 15000 |
| (600–2300) | (1000–6700) | (8600–22400) | (8300–24000) | |
| Southern Africa | 300 | 800 | 4000 | 3900 |
| (100–500) | (200–1400) | (2300–5500) | (2300–6000) | |
| Eastern Africa | 3300 | 12600 | 26400 | 25900 |
| (1300–4600) | (3100–21700) | 15300–40300) | 14700–42700) | |
| Western Africa | 3200 | 18300 | 23500 | 23000 |
| (1300–5200) | (4500–30800) | (10200–39000) | (10300–41000) | |
| Middle Africa | 1400 | 6300 | 15900 | 15600 |
| (3300–12500) | (1600–10800) | (7900–25600) | (7500–25900) | |
| Africa | 9600 | 42000 | 85200 | 20700 |
| (6700–25000) | (10400–71400) | (44300–132800) | (43100–140000) | |
| Caribbean | 200 | 100 | 2600 | 1300 |
| (60–300) | (0–200) | (1500–3700) | (0–4300) | |
| Central America | 800 | 200 | 3100 | 1700 |
| (300–1300) | (1700–13400) | (200–6430) | (0–6100) | |
| South America | 1600 | 600 | 8000 | 4200 |
| (700–2600) | (0–1200) | (1700–14400) | 4000–14500) | |
| Latin America | 3700 | 900 | 13700 | 5900 |
| (1000–4100) | (0–2000) | (3400–24400) | (4000–24800) | |
| Developed countries | 3000 | 500 | 10900 | 6000 |
| (1300–5000) | (0–800) | (0–25800) | (0–15500) | |
| Total | 32800 | 56800 | 205500 | 113800 |
| (13400–52100) | (11600–103900) | (44200–326000) | (0–11100) |
Data in parentheses represent the uncertainty range (UR).
Abbreviations: EOGBS, early-onset group B Streptococcus; GBS, group B Streptococcus; IAP, intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis; LOGBS, late-onset group B Streptococcus; NDI, neurodevelopmental impairment.
aStillbirths indicated a minimum estimate of cases of fetal infection.
Figure 4.Cases estimated for group B streptococcal (GBS) disease in pregnant/postpartum women, fetuses, and infants in 2015, by United Nations Sustainable Development Goal region. *Stillbirths represent a minimum estimate of fetal infection cases. More details are shown in Supplementary Figures 4, 11, and 12.
Figure 5.Deaths estimated from group B streptococcal (GBS) disease for infants and stillbirths in 2015, by United Nations Sustainable Development Goal region. Maternal deaths not estimated. More details are shown in Supplementary Figures 6 and 12.
Countries With the Highest Estimated Numbers of Infant Group B Streptococcal Disease Cases and Deaths
| Cases | Deaths | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rank | Country | Infant Cases | Rank | Country | Infant Deaths |
| 1 | India | 31000 | 1 | India | 13000 |
| (0–75000) | (5000–23000) | ||||
| 2 | China | 25 000 | 2 | Nigeria | 8000 |
| (0–59000) | (2000–16000) | ||||
| 3 | Nigeria | 22000 | 3 | Ethiopia | 4000 |
| (8000–39000) | (2000–8000) | ||||
| 4 | Democratic Republic of the Congo | 16000 | 4 | Democratic Republic of the Congo | 4000 |
| (8000–39000) | (2000–7000) | ||||
| 5 | Egypt | 14000 | 5 | Pakistan | 3000 |
| (8000–21000) | (1000–6000) | ||||
Data in parentheses represent the uncertainty range.
Stillbirth, Infant Deaths From Group B Streptococcal Disease and Resultant Disability Estimated in 2015
| Region | Stillbirth | Early Infant Deaths | Late Infant Deaths | Disability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Southern Asia | 9700 | 19600 | 400 | 1000 |
| (1200–21300) | (8500–34400) | (0–2800) | (0–4500) | |
| Eastern Asia | 1300 | 3200 | 200 | 700 |
| (0–2800) | (1100–5800) | (0–1600) | (0–2400) | |
| Central Asia | 200 | 400 | 0 | 100 |
| (0–400) | (100–600) | (0–200) | (0–300) | |
| Western Asia | 800 | 2100 | 100 | 300 |
| (0–1700) | (900–10900) | (0–700) | (0–1100) | |
| South-Eastern Asia | 1500 | 5200 | 200 | 600 |
| (0–3300) | (2100–8900) | (0–1400) | (0–2300) | |
| Asia | 13400 | 30400 | 900 | 2600 |
| (1200–29600) | (12700–60600) | (0–6600) | (0–10600) | |
| Oceania | 40 | 100 | 0 | 10 |
| (0–90) | (60–200) | (0–30) | (0–40) | |
| Northern Africa | 4000 | 6600 | 1800 | 1200 |
| (1000–6700) | (3100–10900) | (600–3600) | (600–2100) | |
| Southern Africa | 800 | 1200 | 500 | 300 |
| (200–1400) | (600–1900) | (100–900) | (200–500) | |
| Eastern Africa | 12600 | 15600 | 3100 | 2000 |
| (3100–21700) | (7500–26800) | (1000–6400) | (1000–3600) | |
| Western Africa | 18300 | 13400 | 2800 | 1800 |
| (4500–30800) | (5000–24500) | (800–6000) | (700–3300) | |
| Middle Africa | 6300 | 7300 | 1900 | 1200 |
| (1500–10800) | (3100–12600) | (600–3900) | (500–2400) | |
| Africa | 42000 | 44000 | 10000 | 6400 |
| (10400–71400) | (19200–76700) | (3100–20800) | (3000–11900) | |
| Caribbean | 100 | 900 | 100 | 100 |
| (0–200) | (300–1600) | (0–400) | (60–400) | |
| Central America | 200 | 800 | 100 | 200 |
| (0–500) | (100–2000) | (0–600) | (0–600) | |
| South America | 600 | 1600 | 300 | 400 |
| (0–1200) | (1400–3700) | (0–1400) | (60–1300) | |
| Latin America | 900 | 3300 | 400 | 700 |
| (0–2000) | (1900–7200) | (0–2400) | (100–2300) | |
| Developed countries | 500 | 500 | 200 | 700 |
| (0–800) | (0–1300) | (0–700) | (0–1700) | |
| Total | 56800 | 78400 | 11500 | 10500 |
| (11600–103900) | (32500–138900) | (3100–30500) | (3000–26000) |
Data are presented as estimate (uncertainty range).
Figure 6.Care and measurement gap estimating cases from incidence and prevalence data. Adapted from Lawn et al [15]. Triangulation of estimates from compartmental model compared to incidence data for invasive infant disease is detailed in Supplementary Figures 8 and 9. Abbreviation: GBS, group B Streptococcus.
Figure 7.Scenarios of estimated cases of group B streptococcal (GBS) disease and deaths prevented with different intervention methods in a year. For worldwide clinical risk factor screening and intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP) where microbiological screening was in place, this estimate was applied for that country. To facilitate comparison between the current situation and interventions, case fatality risks have been applied as at present (ie, a higher case fatality risk for deliveries without a skilled birth attendant).
Figure 8.Group B streptococcal (GBS) serotypes colonizing mothers and causing disease in pregnant/postpartum women and infants. *Maternal colonization studies frequently reported Ia/Ib together, so these data are shown pooled. More details are shown in Supplementary Table 5.
Figure 9.Summary of outcomes and measurement gaps in terms of deaths and disability from group B Streptococcus (GBS) in pregnant women, stillbirths, and infants worldwide in 2015. More details of cases and outcomes are shown in Supplementary Figures 4, 6, 7, 10–12.
Maternal Group B Streptococcus Vaccines in Development With Data in the Public Domain
| Vaccine Candidate | Manufacturer | Vaccine Construct | Phase | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discovery | Preclinical | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Program Status | |||
| NA | Pfizer | Multivalent CPS conjugate | X | Clinical program start in 2017 [55] | |||
| GBS vaccine | Novartis/GSK | Trivalent CPS (serotypes Ia, IIb, III) conjugated to CRM197, unadjuvanted | X | Completed safety and immunogenicity in pregnant women. Study completed [27, 56–61] | |||
| NA | GSK | Pentavalent (Ia, Ib, II, III, V) CPS-CRM197 | X | ||||
| NA | GSK | Pilus proteins | X | ||||
| NA | Biovac | Polyvalent CPS conjugate | X | Program start in 2017 | |||
| GBS-NN vaccine/ MVX13211 | Minervax | N-domains of Rib and Alpha C surface proteins, unadjuvanted or Alhydrogel-adjuvanted | X | Safety and immunogenicity in nonpregnant women. Study completed [26, 62, 63]. | |||
Abbreviations: CPS, capsular polysaccharide; GBS, group B Streptococcus; NA, not available.
Comparison of Annual Estimates of Infectious Etiologies Causing Stillbirth, Infant Disease, and Death Worldwide, Including Those Where Maternal Vaccination Is Used or Could Be Used to Reduce This Burden
| Disease | Stillbirths | No. of Neonatal or Other Relevant Deaths Related to Maternal Infection or Nonimmunity | No. of Neonatal/Infant Cases per Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group B | 57000 (12000–103000) | 90 000a (41000–185000) | 319 000 (119000–417000) |
| Respiratory syncytial virus | Not applicable | 27300b (20700–36200) [64] | NA |
| Pertussis | NA | 2700c,d [65] | NA |
| Syphilis | 200 000 [7] | 62 000c [66] | 102 000 [66] |
| Tetanus | Not applicable | 34 000c (18000–84000) [67] | NA |
| HIV/AIDS | 9 000 [7] | 86 000e (76000–101000) [67] | NA |
| Malaria | 213 000 [7] | NA | NA |
Data are presented as estimate (uncertainty range).
Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; NA, no relevant estimate available.
aYoung infants (0–89 days).
bInfants (0–6 months).
cNeonates (0–27 days).
dWorld Health Organization modeling-based estimates approximately 56 700 pertussis deaths in children <5 years of age in 2015 from which the neonatal component is derived [65]. Other work suggests the burden could be higher, with 160 700 deaths (range, 38 000–670 000 with sensitivity analyses) in children <5 years of age [68].
eChildren <5 years of age but due to mother-to-child transmission.
Data Inputs Into the Compartmental Model by Step, Considering the Main Biases
| Compartmental model | Parameter | Care and Measurement Gap and Resultant Biases | Model Data Input Used | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lack of Access to Care | Poor Quality of Care and Lack of Clinical Assessment | Failure to Take Appropriate Samples due to Lack of Protocols, Skilled Personnel, or Supplies | Poor Quality of Laboratory Methods to Support Pathogen Detection | |||
| Step 1 Colonization | Infants exposed to maternal GBS at birth [ | Maternal colonization prevalence measured in facilities: could increase or decrease prevalence dependent on risk factors for maternal GBS colonization | Sample-taking can reduce maternal colonization eg, taking a high vaginal swab. This was adjusted for in prevalence data included. | Culture methods such as broth enrichment increase detection of GBS. Where these were not used, we adjusted the prevalence data included. | Maternal colonization prevalence adjusted for swab sample site and culture methods | |
| Step 2: Cases | IAP policy | IAP only where care accessed | Intrapartum antibiotics could be given inappropriately with overuse or underuse | IAP policy applied nationally with estimated coverage | ||
| Risk of EOGBS | EOGBS underestimated where care access low | EOGBS underestimated if clinical assessment limited | EOGBS underestimated if sampling limited | EOGBS underestimated if laboratory methods insensitive | Risks based on IAP policy in counrtry and estimated coverage | |
| Ratio of EOGBS to LOGBS | May appear lower with lack of access to care especially at the time of birth | Will likely decrease EOGBS and LOGBS but less change to ratio | Will likely decrease EOGBS and LOGBS but less change to ratio | Will likely decrease EOGBS and LOGBS but less change to ratio | Ratio from regional data due to differences in IAP policies and potential for true differences in EOGBS and LOGBS disease incidence; no adjustments made | |
| Ratio of meningitis to sepsis cases in EOGBS | Ratio may be higher with lack of access to care, if CFR lower in meningitis | Ratio may be lower with poor quality of care and lack of assessment if meningitis not recognized | Ratio may be lower due to insufficient CSF sampling | Ratio may be higher where blood culture detection more difficult than detection in cerebrospinal fluid | Ratio from worldwide data, may be increased or decreased in either direction; no adjustment made | |
| Ratio of meningitis to sepsis cases in LOGBS | Ratio may be higher with lack of access to care if CFR lower in meningitis | Ratio may be lower with poor quality of care and lack of assessment if meningitis not recognized | Ratio may be lower due to insufficient CSF sampling | Ratio may be higher where blood culture detection more difficult than detection in CSF | Ratio from worldwide data, may be increased or decreased in either direction; no adjustment made | |
| Step 3: Deaths | Case fatality risk in EOGBS | Reduced with low access to care | Increased with lack of appropriate assessment | Reduced if samples not taken from sickest infants | CFR adjusted to increase where access to care reduced (lack of skilled birth attendant). | |
| Case fatality risk in LOGBS | Reduced with low access to care but likely less of effect than for EOGBS | Increased with lack of appropriate assessment | Reduced if samples not taken from sickest infants | CFR not adjusted for LOGBS, this likely underestimates death. | ||
| Step 4: Disability | NDI risk in infant meningitis (EOGBS and LOGBS) | May decrease NDI if more deaths, but may increase if NDI not detected, eg, through premature death | Underdetection of NDI | NDI incidence at 18 months of age all from developed countries, this likely underestimates cases in the rest of world | ||
Abbreviations: CFR, case fatality risk; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; EOGBS, early-onset group B Streptococcus; GBS, group B Streptococcus; IAP, intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis; LOGBS, late-onset group B Streptococcus; NDI, neurodevelopmental impairment.
Key Findings and Implications
| What’s new about this? |
| What are the main findings? |
| How can the data be improved? |
| What does it mean for policy and programs? |
Abbreviations: DALY, disability-adjusted life-year; EOGBS, early-onset group B Streptococcus; GBS, group B Streptococcus; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IAP, intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; UR, uncertainty range.