Rapid intrapartum test for maternal group B streptococcal colonisation and its effect on antibiotic use in labouring women with risk factors for early-onset neonatal infection (GBS2): cluster randomised trial with nested test accuracy study
Author
Daniels, Jane PDixon, Emily
Gill, Alicia
Bishop, Jon
Wilks, Mark
Millar, Michael
Gray, Jim
Roberts, Tracy E
Plumb, Jane
Deeks, Jonathan J
Hemming, Karla
Khan, Khalid S
Thangaratinam, Shakila
Affiliation
University of Nottingham; University of Birmingham; Barts Health NHS Trust; Queen Mary University of London; Birmingham Women's & Children's NHS Foundation Trust; Group B Strep Support; University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; University of GranadaOther Contributors
Ahmed, KhaledDodds, Julie
D'Amico, Maria
Tryposkiadis, Kostas
Whiley, Angela
Moore, Patrick
Munetsi, Ruvimbo Lorraine
Karkhanis, Pallavi
Deans, Anne
Sharma, Sanjula
Wright, Gemma
Subramanian, Manjula
Ray, Irene
Datta, Dibyenda
Lacey, Lauren
Pepper, Johnathon
Mason, Ruth
Shah, Neil
Anwar, Katharina
Navaneetham, Neena
Husain, Shad
Bennett, Phillip
Masson, Geraldine
Raykova, Hristina
Hogg, Matthew
Dawalatly, Bashir
Thirumalaikumar, Lakshmi
Townsend, Kate
Collins, Gerry
Heath, Paul
Hood, Kerry
Petrou, Stavros
Stenson, Ben
McMullen, Sarah
Saunders, Julia
Stanley, Alison
Walters, Stephen
Bossuyt, Patrick
Gilbert, Ruth
Hughes, Rhona
Publication date
2022-01-14
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Mother-to-baby transmission of group B Streptococcus (GBS) is the main cause of early-onset infection. We evaluated whether, in women with clinical risk factors for early neonatal infection, the use of point-of-care rapid intrapartum test to detect maternal GBS colonisation reduces maternal antibiotic exposure compared with usual care, where antibiotics are administered due to those risk factors. We assessed the accuracy of the rapid test in diagnosing maternal GBS colonisation, against the reference standard of selective enrichment culture. Methods: We undertook a parallel-group cluster randomised trial, with nested test accuracy study and microbiological sub-study. UK maternity units were randomised to a strategy of rapid test (GeneXpert GBS system, Cepheid) or usual care. Within units assigned to rapid testing, vaginal-rectal swabs were taken from women with risk factors for vertical GBS transmission in established term labour. The trial primary outcome was the proportion of women receiving intrapartum antibiotics to prevent neonatal early-onset GBS infection. The accuracy of the rapid test was compared against the standard of selective enrichment culture in diagnosing maternal GBS colonisation. Antibiotic resistance profiles were determined in paired maternal and infant samples. Results: Twenty-two maternity units were randomised and 20 were recruited. A total of 722 mothers (749 babies) participated in rapid test units; 906 mothers (951 babies) were in usual care units. There was no evidence of a difference in the rates of intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (relative risk 1.16, 95% CI 0.83 to 1.64) between the rapid test (41%, 297/716) and usual care (36%, 328/906) units. No serious adverse events were reported. The sensitivity and specificity measures of the rapid test were 86% (95% CI 81 to 91%) and 89% (95% CI 85 to 92%), respectively. Babies born to mothers who carried antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli were more likely to be colonised with antibiotic-resistant strains than those born to mothers with antibiotic-susceptible E. coli. Conclusion: The use of intrapartum rapid test to diagnose maternal GBS colonisation did not reduce the rates of antibiotics administered for preventing neonatal early-onset GBS infection than usual care, although with considerable uncertainty. The accuracy of the rapid test is within acceptable limits. Trial registration: ISRCTN74746075 . Prospectively registered on 16 April 2015Citation
Daniels JP, Dixon E, Gill A, Bishop J, Wilks M, Millar M, Gray J, Roberts TE, Plumb J, Deeks JJ, Hemming K, Khan KS, Thangaratinam S; GBS2 Collaborative Group. Rapid intrapartum test for maternal group B streptococcal colonisation and its effect on antibiotic use in labouring women with risk factors for early-onset neonatal infection (GBS2): cluster randomised trial with nested test accuracy study. BMC Med. 2022 Jan 14;20(1):9. doi: 10.1186/s12916-021-02202-2.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://bmcmedicine.biomedcentral.com/PMID
35027057Journal
BMC MedicinePublisher
BioMed Centralae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1186/s12916-021-02202-2