Department of Global Health, George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health, Washington, DC, United States of America.
Department of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2022 Jun 16;17(6):e0270150. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0270150. eCollection 2022.
We urgently need answers to basic epidemiological questions regarding SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnant and postpartum women and its effect on their newborns. While many national registries, health facilities, and research groups are collecting relevant data, we need a collaborative and methodologically rigorous approach to better combine these data and address knowledge gaps, especially those related to rare outcomes. We propose that using a sequential, prospective meta-analysis (PMA) is the best approach to generate data for policy- and practice-oriented guidelines. As the pandemic evolves, additional studies identified retrospectively by the steering committee or through living systematic reviews will be invited to participate in this PMA. Investigators can contribute to the PMA by either submitting individual patient data or running standardized code to generate aggregate data estimates. For the primary analysis, we will pool data using two-stage meta-analysis methods. The meta-analyses will be updated as additional data accrue in each contributing study and as additional studies meet study-specific time or data accrual thresholds for sharing. At the time of publication, investigators of 25 studies, including more than 76,000 pregnancies, in 41 countries had agreed to share data for this analysis. Among the included studies, 12 have a contemporaneous comparison group of pregnancies without COVID-19, and four studies include a comparison group of non-pregnant women of reproductive age with COVID-19. Protocols and updates will be maintained publicly. Results will be shared with key stakeholders, including the World Health Organization (WHO) Maternal, Newborn, Child, and Adolescent Health (MNCAH) Research Working Group. Data contributors will share results with local stakeholders. Scientific publications will be published in open-access journals on an ongoing basis.
我们迫切需要回答有关 SARS-CoV-2 感染孕妇和产后妇女及其对新生儿影响的基本流行病学问题。虽然许多国家登记处、卫生机构和研究小组正在收集相关数据,但我们需要采用协作和方法严谨的方法来更好地合并这些数据并解决知识空白,特别是与罕见结局相关的知识空白。我们建议使用顺序、前瞻性荟萃分析(PMA)是生成面向政策和实践指南的数据的最佳方法。随着大流行的发展,将通过指导委员会或通过实时系统评价回顾性确定的额外研究邀请参与该 PMA。调查人员可以通过提交个体患者数据或运行标准化代码来生成汇总数据估计值来为 PMA 做出贡献。在主要分析中,我们将使用两阶段荟萃分析方法合并数据。随着每个参与研究的数据不断增加,以及随着更多研究达到特定研究的时间或数据积累阈值以进行共享,将对荟萃分析进行更新。在发表时,来自 41 个国家的 25 项研究的 76000 多次妊娠的研究人员已同意为这项分析共享数据。在纳入的研究中,有 12 项研究有一个同期的无 COVID-19 妊娠的对照组,4 项研究包括一个 COVID-19 的育龄非孕妇对照组。方案和更新将公开维护。结果将与包括世界卫生组织(WHO)孕产妇、新生儿、儿童和青少年健康(MNCAH)研究工作组在内的主要利益攸关方共享。数据贡献者将与当地利益攸关方分享结果。科学出版物将在开放获取期刊上持续发表。