Severe group A streptococcal infections in mothers and their newborns in London and the South East, 2010–2016: assessment of risk and audit of public health …

A Leonard, A Wright… - … Journal of Obstetrics …, 2019 - Wiley Online Library
A Leonard, A Wright, M Saavedra‐Campos, T Lamagni, R Cordery, M Nicholls, C Domoney…
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 2019Wiley Online Library
Objective We describe cases of invasive group A Streptococcus (iGAS) in mothers or
neonates and assess management according to national guidelines, which recommend
administering antibiotics to both mother and neonate if either develops iGAS infection within
28 days of birth and investigation of clusters in maternity units. Design Cross‐sectional
retrospective study. Setting and population Notified confirmed iGAS cases in either mothers
or neonates with onset within 28 days of birth in London and the South East of England …
Objective
We describe cases of invasive group A Streptococcus (iGAS) in mothers or neonates and assess management according to national guidelines, which recommend administering antibiotics to both mother and neonate if either develops iGAS infection within 28 days of birth and investigation of clusters in maternity units.
Design
Cross‐sectional retrospective study.
Setting and population
Notified confirmed iGAS cases in either mothers or neonates with onset within 28 days of birth in London and the South East of England between 2010 and 2016
Method
Review of public health records of notified cases.
Main outcome measures
Incidence and onset time of iGAS in postpartum mothers and babies, proportion given prophylaxis, maternity unit clusters within 6 months.
Results
We identified 134 maternal and 21 neonatal confirmed iGAS infections. The incidence (in 100 000 person years) of iGAS in women within 28 days postpartum was 109 (95% CI 90–127) compared with 1.3 in other females aged 15–44. For neonates the incidence was 1.5 (95% CI 9–23). The median onset time was 2 days postpartum [interquartile range (IQR) 0–5 days] for mothers and 12 days (IQR 7–15 days) for neonates. All eligible mothers and most (109, 89%) eligible neonates received chemoprophylaxis. Of 20 clusters (59 cases of GAS and iGAS) in maternity units, two clusters involved possible transmission. However, in 6 of 15 clusters, GAS isolates were not saved for comparison even after relevant guidance was issued.
Conclusions
iGAS infection remains a potential postpartum risk. Prophylaxis among neonates and storage of isolates from maternity cases can be improved.
Tweetable abstract
Are public health guidelines being followed in the management of mothers and their newborns to reduce the risk of iGAS infection?
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