TY - JOUR
T1 - Neonatal invasive disease caused by Streptococcus agalactiae in Europe
T2 - the DEVANI multi-center study
AU - for the DEVANI Study Group
AU - Lohrmann, Florens
AU - Hufnagel, Markus
AU - Kunze, Mirjam
AU - Afshar, Baharak
AU - Creti, Roberta
AU - Detcheva, Antoaneta
AU - Kozakova, Jana
AU - Rodriguez-Granger, Javier
AU - Sørensen, Uffe B.Skov
AU - Margarit, Immaculada
AU - Maione, Domenico
AU - Rinaudo, Daniela
AU - Orefici, Graziella
AU - Telford, John
AU - de la Rosa Fraile, Manuel
AU - Kilian, Mogens
AU - Efstratiou, Androulla
AU - Berner, Reinhard
AU - Melin, Pierrette
AU - Petrunov, B.
AU - Krizova, P.
AU - Poulsen, K.
AU - Karstens, L.
AU - Baldassarri, L.
AU - Imperi, M.
AU - Rigat, F.
AU - Berardi, A.
AU - Grandi, G.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - Purpose: Group B streptococcus (GBS) remains a leading cause of invasive disease, mainly sepsis and meningitis, in infants < 3 months of age and of mortality among neonates. This study, a major component of the European DEVANI project (Design of a Vaccine Against Neonatal Infections) describes clinical and important microbiological characteristics of neonatal GBS diseases. It quantifies the rate of antenatal screening and intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis among cases and identifies risk factors associated with an adverse outcome. Methods: Clinical and microbiological data from 153 invasive neonatal cases (82 early-onset [EOD], 71 late-onset disease [LOD] cases) were collected in eight European countries from mid-2008 to end-2010. Results: Respiratory distress was the most frequent clinical sign at onset of EOD, while meningitis is found in > 30% of LOD. The study revealed that 59% of mothers of EOD cases had not received antenatal screening, whilst GBS was detected in 48.5% of screened cases. Meningitis was associated with an adverse outcome in LOD cases, while prematurity and the presence of cardiocirculatory symptoms were associated with an adverse outcome in EOD cases. Capsular-polysaccharide type III was the most frequent in both EOD and LOD cases with regional differences in the clonal complex distribution. Conclusions: Standardizing recommendations related to neonatal GBS disease and increasing compliance might improve clinical care and the prevention of GBS EOD. But even full adherence to antenatal screening would miss a relevant number of EOD cases, thus, the most promising prophylactic approach against GBS EOD and LOD would be a vaccine for maternal immunization.
AB - Purpose: Group B streptococcus (GBS) remains a leading cause of invasive disease, mainly sepsis and meningitis, in infants < 3 months of age and of mortality among neonates. This study, a major component of the European DEVANI project (Design of a Vaccine Against Neonatal Infections) describes clinical and important microbiological characteristics of neonatal GBS diseases. It quantifies the rate of antenatal screening and intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis among cases and identifies risk factors associated with an adverse outcome. Methods: Clinical and microbiological data from 153 invasive neonatal cases (82 early-onset [EOD], 71 late-onset disease [LOD] cases) were collected in eight European countries from mid-2008 to end-2010. Results: Respiratory distress was the most frequent clinical sign at onset of EOD, while meningitis is found in > 30% of LOD. The study revealed that 59% of mothers of EOD cases had not received antenatal screening, whilst GBS was detected in 48.5% of screened cases. Meningitis was associated with an adverse outcome in LOD cases, while prematurity and the presence of cardiocirculatory symptoms were associated with an adverse outcome in EOD cases. Capsular-polysaccharide type III was the most frequent in both EOD and LOD cases with regional differences in the clonal complex distribution. Conclusions: Standardizing recommendations related to neonatal GBS disease and increasing compliance might improve clinical care and the prevention of GBS EOD. But even full adherence to antenatal screening would miss a relevant number of EOD cases, thus, the most promising prophylactic approach against GBS EOD and LOD would be a vaccine for maternal immunization.
KW - Early-onset disease
KW - Group B streptococcal vaccine
KW - Group B streptococcus
KW - Late-onset disease
KW - Neonatal infection
KW - Streptococcus agalactiae
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85144740870&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s15010-022-01965-x
DO - 10.1007/s15010-022-01965-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 36547864
AN - SCOPUS:85144740870
SN - 0300-8126
VL - 51
SP - 981
EP - 991
JO - Infection
JF - Infection
IS - 4
ER -