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mSep: investigating physiological and immune-metabolic biomarkers in septic and healthy pregnant women to predict feto-maternal immune health – a prospective observational cohort study protocol

Authors :
Simran Sharma
Summia Zaher
Patrícia R S Rodrigues
Luke C Davies
Sarah Edkins
Angela Strang
Mallinath Chakraborty
W John Watkins
Robert Andrews
Edward Parkinson
Nicos Angelopoulos
Linda Moet
Freya Shepherd
Kate Megan Megan Davies
Daniel White
Shaun Oram
Kate Siddall
Vikki Keeping
Kathryn Simpson
Federica Faggian
Maryanne Bray
Claire Bertorelli
Sarah Bell
Rachel E Collis
James E McLaren
Mario Labeta
Valerie B O’Donnell
Peter Ghazal
Source :
BMJ Open. 12:e066382
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ, 2022.

Abstract

IntroductionMaternal sepsis remains a leading cause of death in pregnancy. Physiological adaptations to pregnancy obscure early signs of sepsis and can result in delays in recognition and treatment. Identifying biomarkers that can reliably diagnose sepsis will reduce morbidity and mortality and antibiotic overuse. We have previously identified an immune-metabolic biomarker network comprising three pathways with a >99% accuracy for detecting bacterial neonatal sepsis. In this prospective study, we will describe physiological parameters and novel biomarkers in two cohorts—healthy pregnant women and pregnant women with suspected sepsis—with the aim of mapping pathophysiological drivers and evaluating predictive biomarkers for diagnosing maternal sepsis.Methods and analysisWomen aged over 18 with an ultrasound-confirmed pregnancy will be recruited to a pilot and two main study cohorts. The pilot will involve blood sample collection from 30 pregnant women undergoing an elective caesarean section. Cohort A will follow 100 healthy pregnant women throughout their pregnancy journey, with collection of blood samples from participants at routine time points in their pregnancy: week 12 ‘booking’, week 28 and during labour. Cohort B will follow 100 pregnant women who present with suspected sepsis in pregnancy or labour and will have at least two blood samples taken during their care pathway. Study blood samples will be collected during routine clinical blood sampling. Detailed medical history and physiological parameters at the time of blood sampling will be recorded, along with the results of routine biochemical tests, including C reactive protein, lactate and white blood cell count. In addition, study blood samples will be processed and analysed for transcriptomic, lipidomic and metabolomic analyses and both qualitative and functional immunophenotyping.Ethics and disseminationEthical approval has been obtained from the Wales Research Ethics Committee 2 (SPON1752-19, 30 October 2019).Trial registration numberNCT05023954.

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a06ba826ea4326357e6ebc63c98ca8b6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066382