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Neurodevelopmental and growth outcomes after invasive Group B

Authors :
Proma, Paul
Jaya, Chandna
Simon R, Procter
Ziyaad, Dangor
Shannon, Leahy
Sridhar, Santhanam
Hima B, John
Quique, Bassat
Justina, Bramugy
Azucena, Bardají
Amina, Abubakar
Carophine, Nasambu
Romina, Libster
Clara Sánchez, Yanotti
Farah, Seedat
Erzsébet, Horváth-Puhó
A K M Tanvir, Hossain
Qazi, Sadeq-Ur Rahman
Mark, Jit
Charles R, Newton
Kate, Milner
Bronner P, Gonçalves
Joy E, Lawn
Source :
EClinicalMedicine. 47
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Data are limited regarding long-term consequences of invasive GBS (iGBS) disease in early infancy, especially from low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) where most cases occur. We aimed to estimate risk of neurodevelopmental impairment (NDI) in children with a history of iGBS disease.A multi-country matched cohort study was undertaken in South Africa, India, Mozambique, Kenya, and Argentina from October 2019 to April 2021. The exposure of interest was defined as a history of iGBS disease (sepsis or meningitis) before 90 days of age, amongst children now aged 1·5-18 years. Age and sex-matched, children without history of GBS were also recruited. Age-appropriate, culturally-adapted assessments were used to define NDI across multiple domains (cognitive, motor, hearing, vision, emotional-behaviour, growth). Pooled NDI risk was meta-analysed across sites. Association of iGBS exposure and NDI outcome was estimated using modified Poisson regression with robust variance estimator.Amongst 138 iGBS survivors and 390 non-iGBS children, 38·1% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 30·0% - 46·6%) of iGBS children had any NDI, compared to 21·7% (95% CI: 17·7% - 26·0%) of non- iGBS children, with notable between-site heterogeneity. Risk of moderate/severe NDI was 15·0% (95% CI: 3·4% - 30·8%) among GBS-meningitis, 5·6% (95% CI: 1·5% - 13·7%) for GBS-sepsis survivors. The adjusted risk ratio (aRR) for moderate/severe NDI among iGBS survivors was 1.27 (95% CI: 0.65, 2.45), when compared to non-GBS children. Mild impairment was more frequent in iGBS (27.6% (95% CI: 20.3 - 35.5%)) compared to non-GBS children (12.9% (95% CI: 9.7% - 16.4%)). The risk of emotional-behavioural problems was similar irrespective of iGBS exposure (aRR=0.98 (95% CI: 0.55, 1.77)).Our findings suggest that iGBS disease is on average associated with a higher risk of moderate/severe NDI, however substantial variation in risk was observed between sites and data are consistent with a wide range of values. Our study underlines the importance of long-term follow-up for at-risk neonates and more feasible, standardised assessments to facilitate diagnosis in research and clinical practice.This work was supported by a grant (INV-009018) from the BillMelinda Gates Foundation to the London School of HygieneTropical Medicine.

Details

ISSN :
25895370
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EClinicalMedicine
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........6f3397d0a468af94eb4a3a40b99f13d3