Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Full description
Transmission of GBS under delivery leads in 1/1000 of live births to severe sepsis in the neonate and may have serious sequelae including death. Most of the cases concern early onset sepsis which occurs in the first three to seven days after birth. Several randomized studies showed that antibiotic prophylaxis during delivery reduces the risk of early onset sepsis in the neonate in 85%, whereas late onset sepsis was not affected. Accurate screening including appropriate culture methods are critical for the wealth of the newborn and the decision regarding application of antibiotic prophylaxis to the mother. In this study we compare a simplified test algorithm taking swabs from the vagina and the perineum only versus a combined vaginal and rectal swab for GBS culture which is the current gold standard of diagnosis as the culture yield for GBS increases substantially when samples are taken from both the lower vagina and the rectum compared to swabbing the vagina or endocervix only. There is certain reluctance for performing a rectal swab as it has been associated with discomfort.
The study aims to demonstrate that this simplified vagino-perineal swab leads to a similar GBS detection rate as compared to the gold standard comprising of a combined vaginal and rectal swab. We further aim to systematically assess the degree of discomfort with the rectal swab and compare the costs when applying those different methods.
Additionally we aim to determine the prevalence and risk factors of community acquired ESBL by further processing the swabs in the appropriate culture media and filling in a standardized questionnaire.
We plan a prospective cohort study with inclusion of 450 pregnant women who attend the outpatient obstetric clinic for routine control in the third trimester.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
250 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal