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Neonatal sepsis and mortality in low-income and middle-income countries from a facility-based birth cohort: an international multisite prospective observational study

Authors :
Rebecca Milton
David Gillespie
Calie Dyer
Khadijeh Taiyari
Maria J Carvalho
Kathryn Thomson
Kirsty Sands
Edward A R Portal
Kerenza Hood
Ana Ferreira
Thomas Hender
Nigel Kirby
Jordan Mathias
Maria Nieto
William J Watkins
Delayehu Bekele
Mahlet Abayneh
Semaria Solomon
Sulagna Basu
Ranjan K Nandy
Bijan Saha
Kenneth Iregbu
Fatima Z Modibbo
Stella Uwaezuoke
Rabaab Zahra
Haider Shirazi
Syed U Najeeb
Jean-Baptiste Mazarati
Aniceth Rucogoza
Lucie Gaju
Shaheen Mehtar
Andre N H Bulabula
Andrew C Whitelaw
Timothy R Walsh
Grace J Chan
Oludare Odumade
Rozina Ambachew
Zenebe Gebre Yohannes
Gesit Metaferia
Redeat Workneh
Tefera Biteye
Yahya Zekaria Mohammed
Alula M Teklu
Balkachew Nigatu
Wendimagegn Gezahegn
Partha Sarathi Chakravorty
Sharmi Naha
Anuradha Mukherjee
Khairiyya Muhammad Umar
Asunugwo Vivian Akunna
Queen Nsude
Ifeoma Uke
Mary-Joe Okenu
Chinenye Akpulu
Chukwuemeka Mmadueke
Samuel Yakubu
Lamidi Audu
Nura Idris
Safiya Gambo
Jamila Ibrahim
Edwin Chinago
Ashiru Yusuf
Shamsudden Gwadabe
Adeola Adeleye
Muhammad Aliyu
Amina Muhammad
Aishatu Kassim
Aisha Sani Mukaddas
Rashida Yakubu Khalid
Fatima Ibrahim Alkali
Maryam Yahaya Muhammad
Fatima Muhammad Tukur
Surayya Mustapha Muhammad
Adeola Shittu
Murjanatu Bello
Fatima Habib Sa ad
Shaheed Zulfiqar
Adil Muhammad
Muhammad Hilal Jan
Lauren Paterson
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Background\udNeonatal sepsis is a primary cause of neonatal mortality and is an urgent global health concern, especially within low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), where 99% of global neonatal mortality occurs. The aims of this study were to determine the incidence and associations with neonatal sepsis and all-cause mortality in facility-born neonates in LMICs.\udMethods\udThe Burden of Antibiotic Resistance in Neonates from Developing Societies (BARNARDS) study recruited mothers and their neonates into a prospective observational cohort study across 12 clinical sites from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Rwanda, and South Africa. Data for sepsis-associated factors in the four domains of health care, maternal, birth and neonatal, and living environment were collected for all mothers and neonates enrolled. Primary outcomes were clinically suspected sepsis, laboratory-confirmed sepsis, and all-cause mortality in neonates during the first 60 days of life. Incidence proportion of livebirths for clinically suspected sepsis and laboratory-confirmed sepsis and incidence rate per 1000 neonate-days for all-cause mortality were calculated. Modified Poisson regression was used to investigate factors associated with neonatal sepsis and parametric survival models for factors associated with all-cause mortality.\udFindings\udBetween Nov 12, 2015 and Feb 1, 2018, 29 483 mothers and 30 557 neonates were enrolled. The incidence of clinically suspected sepsis was 166·0 (95% CI 97·69–234·24) per 1000 livebirths, laboratory-confirmed sepsis was 46·9 (19·04–74·79) per 1000 livebirths, and all-cause mortality was 0·83 (0·37–2·00) per 1000 neonate-days. Maternal hypertension, previous maternal hospitalisation within 12 months, average or higher monthly household income, ward size (>11 beds), ward type (neonatal), living in a rural environment, preterm birth, perinatal asphyxia, and multiple births were associated with an increased risk of clinically suspected sepsis, laboratory-confirmed sepsis, and all-cause mortality. The majority (881 [72·5%] of 1215) of laboratory-confirmed sepsis cases occurred within the first 3 days of life.\udInterpretation\udFindings from this study highlight the substantial proportion of neonates who develop neonatal sepsis, and the high mortality rates among neonates with sepsis in LMICs. More efficient and effective identification of neonatal sepsis is needed to target interventions to reduce its incidence and subsequent mortality in LMICs.\udFunding\udBill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2214109X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....90cec59aff3258d66c0750e53f6f1f57