Schrag S J, Zywicki S, Farley M M, Reingold A L, Harrison L H, Lefkowitz L B, Hadler J L, Danila R, Cieslak P R, Schuchat A
Respiratory Diseases Branch, Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Disease, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
N Engl J Med. 2000 Jan 6;342(1):15-20. doi: 10.1056/NEJM200001063420103.
Group B streptococcal infections are a leading cause of neonatal mortality, and they also affect pregnant women and the elderly. Many cases of the disease in newborns can be prevented by the administration of prophylactic intrapartum antibiotics. In the 1990s, prevention efforts increased. In 1996, consensus guidelines recommended use of either a risk-based or a screening-based approach to identify candidates for intrapartum antibiotics. To assess the effects of the preventive efforts, we analyzed trends in the incidence of group B streptococcal disease from 1993 to 1998.
Active, population-based surveillance was conducted in selected counties of eight states. A case was defined by the isolation of group B streptococci from a normally sterile site. Census and live-birth data were used to calculate the race-specific incidence of disease; national projections were adjusted for race.
Disease in infants less than seven days old accounted for 20 percent of all 7867 group B streptococcal infections. The incidence of early-onset neonatal infections decreased by 65 percent, from 1.7 per 1000 live births in 1993 to 0.6 per 1000 in 1998. The excess incidence of early-onset disease in black infants, as compared with white infants, decreased by 75 percent. Projecting our findings to the entire United States, we estimate that 3900 early-onset infections and 200 neonatal deaths were prevented in 1998 by the use of intrapartum antibiotics. Among pregnant girls and women, the incidence of invasive group B streptococcal disease declined by 21 percent. The incidence among nonpregnant adults did not decline.
Over a six-year period, there has been a substantial decline in the incidence of group B streptococcal disease in newborns, including a major reduction in the excess incidence of these infections in black infants. These improvements coincide with the efforts to prevent perinatal disease by the wider use of prophylactic intrapartum antibiotics.
B族链球菌感染是新生儿死亡的主要原因,同时也会影响孕妇和老年人。通过分娩期预防性使用抗生素,许多新生儿病例是可以预防的。在20世纪90年代,预防工作有所加强。1996年,共识指南建议采用基于风险或基于筛查的方法来确定分娩期抗生素的适用对象。为评估预防工作的效果,我们分析了1993年至1998年B族链球菌病发病率的变化趋势。
在八个州的选定县开展了基于人群的主动监测。病例定义为从通常无菌的部位分离出B族链球菌。利用人口普查和活产数据计算特定种族的疾病发病率;对全国数据按种族进行了调整。
在所有7867例B族链球菌感染病例中,出生7天内的婴儿病例占20%。早发型新生儿感染的发病率下降了65%,从1993年每1000例活产中的1.7例降至1998年的每1000例中的0.6例。与白人婴儿相比,黑人婴儿早发型疾病的额外发病率下降了75%。根据我们的研究结果推算至美国全国,我们估计1998年通过使用分娩期抗生素预防了3900例早发型感染和200例新生儿死亡。在怀孕女孩和妇女中,侵袭性B族链球菌病的发病率下降了21%。非怀孕成年人中的发病率没有下降。
在六年时间里,新生儿中B族链球菌病的发病率大幅下降,包括黑人婴儿中这些感染的额外发病率大幅降低。这些改善与通过更广泛使用分娩期预防性抗生素来预防围产期疾病的努力相吻合。