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Population-Based Risk Factors for Neonatal Group B Streptococcal Disease: Results of a Cohort Study in Metropolitan Atlanta
235
Citations
24
References
1990
Year
Epidemiologic ResearchPreterm Birth PredictionPreterm Birth PreventionInvasive Gbs DiseaseReproductive EpidemiologyHigh-risk PregnancyMaternal ImmunizationPreventive MedicineEarly-onset Gbs DiseaseClinical EpidemiologyPrematurityPrenatal CareInfection ControlPublic HealthHospital EpidemiologyGeneral EpidemiologyPopulationEpidemiological TrendMaternal ComplicationMetropolitan AtlantaMaternal HealthPlacental DiseaseCohort StudyRisk FactorsEpidemiologyPopulation-based Risk FactorsPediatricsPregnancyPreterm BirthMedicine
To determine risk factors for neonatal group B streptococcal (GBS) disease, a cohort study was conducted in Atlanta of infants with invasive GBS disease during 1982 and 1983. Laboratory review detected 71 infants with early-onset disease (1.09 cases/1000 live births) and 37 infants with late-onset disease (0.57 cases/1000 live births). Compared with the 64,858 births in Atlanta in the same period, infants with early-onset GBS disease were more often black, less than 2500 g, and born to teenage mothers. A history of miscarriage increased a woman's risk of delivering an infant with early-onset disease. Black infants had 35 times the risk of late-onset disease that nonblack infants had. Thirty percent of early-onset disease and 92% of late-onset disease could be attributed to black race, independent of other risk factors. Most case-mothers (96%) received prenatal care, suggesting that prevention strategies such as prenatal screening or maternal immunization could reach nearly all the population at risk.
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