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Observational Study
. 2024 Oct;5(10):100897.
doi: 10.1016/S2666-5247(24)00129-0. Epub 2024 Aug 20.

Prevalence of group B Streptococcus colonisation in mother-newborn dyads in low-income and middle-income south Asian and African countries: a prospective, observational study

Affiliations
Observational Study

Prevalence of group B Streptococcus colonisation in mother-newborn dyads in low-income and middle-income south Asian and African countries: a prospective, observational study

Gaurav Kwatra et al. Lancet Microbe. 2024 Oct.

Abstract

Background: Rectovaginal group B Streptococcus (GBS) colonisation in pregnant individuals at the time of labour is a major risk factor for invasive GBS disease by age 7 days (early-onset disease). We aimed to investigate the prevalence of rectovaginal GBS colonisation at the time of labour among pregnant women and vertical transmission to their newborns across selected low-income and middle-income African and south Asian countries.

Methods: This prospective, observational study was undertaken at 11 maternity and obstetric care facilities based in Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, Mali, South Africa, Bangladesh, India, and Bhutan. HIV-negative pregnant women aged 18-45 years who were in the early stages of labour and at least 37 weeks' gestation were eligible for inclusion. Lower vaginal and rectal swabs and urine were collected from the women, and swabs of the umbilicus, outer ear, axillary fold, rectum, and throat were obtained from their newborns, for GBS culture. Standardised sampling and culture using direct plating and selective media broth for detection of GBS colonisation was undertaken at the sites. Serotyping of GBS isolates was done in South Africa. The primary outcome was the prevalence of rectovaginal GBS among pregnant women, analysed in participants with available data. This study is registered with the South African National Clinical Trials Register, number DOH-27-0418-4989.

Findings: 6922 pregnant women were enrolled from Jan 10, 2016, to Dec 11, 2018, of whom 6514 (94·1%; 759-892 per country) were included in the analysis; data from Bhutan were not included in the study due to issues with specimen collection and processing. Overall, the prevalence of maternal GBS colonisation was 24·1% (95% CI 23·1-25·2; 1572 of 6514); it was highest in Mali (41·1% [37·7-44·6]; 314 of 764) and lowest in Ethiopia (11·6% [9·5-14·1]; 88 of 759). The overall rate of vertical transmission of GBS from women with rectovaginal GBS colonisation was 72·3% (70·0-74·4; 1132 of 1566); it was highest in Mozambique (79·2% [73·3-84·2]; 168 of 212) and lowest in Bangladesh (55·8%, 47·5-63·8; 77 of 138). The five most common GBS colonising serotypes were Ia (37·3% [34·9-39·7]; 586 of 1572), V (28·5% [26·3-30·8]; 448 of 1572), III (25·1% [23·0-27·3]; 394 of 1572), II (9·2% [7·8-10·7]; 144 of 1572), and Ib (6·5% [5·4-7·8]; 102 of 1572). There was geographical variability in serotype proportion distribution; serotype VII was the third most common serotype in India (8·6% [5·3-13·7]; 15 of 174) and serotype VI was mainly identified in Bangladesh (5·8% [3·0-11·0]; eight of 138) and India (5·7% [3·2-10·3]; ten of 174).

Interpretation: Our study reported a high prevalence of GBS colonisation in most settings, with some geographical variability even within African countries. Our findings suggest that serotypes not included in current multivalent capsular-polysaccharide GBS vaccines prevail in some regions, so vaccine efficacy and post-licensure effectiveness studies should assess the effect of vaccination on maternal GBS colonisation given the potential for replacement by non-vaccine serotypes.

Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests SAM declares grant funding to his institution for research on GBS, separate from this study, from Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline, and Minervax. GK declares grant funding to his institution for research on GBS from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and PATH. All other authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Study profile (A) Pregnant participants. (B) Newborns. Inclusion and exclusion by country is shown in the appendix (pp 8–9). ∗HIV testing was not done at sites where the prevalence of HIV was less than 1% during the study period and not standard of care (ie, Bangladesh). †6445 singleton newborns and 69 pairs of twins were born.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Prevalence of GBS colonisation overall, stratified by culture plating method and by country site (A) Pregnant participants. (B) Newborns. Error bars show 95% CI. GBS=group B Streptococcus. LIM broth=Todd–Hewitt broth supplemented with colistin and nalidixic acid.
Figure 3
Figure 3
GBS serotype distribution, per country site and overall (A) Pregnant participants. (B) Newborns. Error bars show 95% CI. GBS=group B Streptococcus.

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