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'''Group B streptococcus infection''' ('''GBS'''), also known as strep B and group B strep, is [[infection]] with the [[bacteria]] ''[[Streptococcus]]''. Group B streptococcal infection can cause serious illness and sometimes death, especially in [[neonatal infection|newborn infants]], the elderly, and people with compromised immune systems.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dhpe.org/infect/strepb.html |title=Group B Streptococcus Facts |publisher=Dhpe.org |date=4 October 1998 |accessdate=18 October 2011}}</ref>


'''Group B streptococcus infection''' is the [[infection]] caused by the [[bacteria]] ''[[Streptococcus agalactiae]]'' (''S. agalactiae'') (also known as Group B [[streptococcus]] or GBS). Group B streptococcal infection can cause serious illness and sometimes death, especially in newborns, the elderly, and people with compromised [[immune systems]].
The [[CAMP test]] is an important test for identification. GBS (group B Streptococcus species) are screened through this test. It is characterized by the presence of group B Lancefield antigen and by its ability to hydrolyze sodium hippurate.<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=371403 |year=1979 |last1=Smith |first1=JP |last2=Durfee |first2=KK |last3=Marymont Jr |first3=JH |title=A review of laboratory methods for identification of group B streptococci (Streptococcus agalactiae) |volume=45 |issue=3 |pages=199–204 |journal=The American journal of medical technology}}</ref> It is also sensitive to bile, and will lyse in its presence.
GBS was recognized as a pathogen in cattle by [[Edmond Nocard]] and Mollereau in the late 1880s, but its significance as a human pathogen was not discovered before the 1938 when Fry
<ref name="Fry 1938">{{cite journal|last1=Fry RM.|title=Fatal infections by haemolytic streptococcus group B.|journal=Lancet|date=1938|volume=1938:1|pages=199-201}}</ref>
described three fatal cases of puerperal infections caused by GBS. In the early 1960s GBS was recognized as a main cause of neonatal sepsis.
<ref name="Eickhoff 1964">{{cite journal|last1=Eickhoff TC, Klein JO, Kathleen Daly A, David Ingall, Finland M.|title=Neonatal Sepsis and Other Infections Due to Group B Beta-Hemolytic Streptococci|journal=N Eng J Med.|date=1964|volume=271|pages=1221-1228|doi=10.1056/NEJM196412102712401|url=http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM196412102712401}}</ref>


In general, GBS is a harmless [[commensal]] [[bacterium]] being part of the human [[microbiota]] colonizing the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract of up to 30% of healthy human adults ([[asymptomatic carriers]]).
Group B streptococci are also a common veterinary [[pathogen]]s, because they can cause bovine [[mastitis]] ([[inflammation]] of the [[udder]]) in dairy cows. The species name "agalactiae" meaning "no milk", alludes to this.
<ref name="GBS Medicine net">{{cite web|title=Group B Strep Infection.|url=http://www.medicinenet.com/group_b_strep/article.htm|website=MedicineNet.com|accessdate=10 January 2016}}</ref>
<ref name="Edwards 2010">{{cite book|last1=Edwards MS, Baker CJ.|title=Streptococcus agalactiae (group B streptococcus). Mandell GL, Bennett JE, Dolin R (eds) Principles and practice of infectious diseases. Vol 2,|date=2010|publisher=Elsevier.|isbn=978-0-443-06839-3|pages=Chapter 202.|edition=7th.}}</ref>
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />


''S. agalactiae'' is also a common veterinary [[pathogen]], because it can cause bovine [[mastitis]] ([[inflammation]] of the [[udder]]) in dairy cows. The species name "agalactiae" meaning "no milk", alludes to this.
==Newborns==
<ref name="Keefe 1997">{{cite journal|last1=Keefe GP.|title=Streptococcus agalactiae mastitis: a review. Can Vet J. 38: 199–204.|journal=Can Vet J.|date=1997|volume=38|page=199-204|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1576741/pdf/canvetj00092-0031.pdf}}</ref>
[[Image:Group B Strep.gif|right|500px|U.S. Prevention of Perinatal Group B Streptococcal Disease, CDC]]
''S. agalactiae'' is a [[gram-positive]] coccus (spherical bacteria) with a tendency to form chains (streptococcus), beta-haemolytic, [[catalase]]-negative, and [[facultative anaerobe]].
{{See|Neonatal infection}}
<ref name="Bergey`s Whiley">{{cite book|last1=Whiley RA, Hardie JM.|title=Genus I. Streptococcus Rosenbach 1884. Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology: Vol 3: The Firmicutes.|date=2009|publisher=Springer.|isbn=978-0-387-95041-9|pages=655-657|edition=2nd.}}</ref>
<ref name="Ryan 2004">{{cite book|last1=Ryan KJ, Ray CG, et al, eds.|title=Sherris Medical Microbiology|date=2004|publisher=McGraw Hill.|isbn=0-8385-8529-9|page=286-288|edition=4th}}</ref>
<ref name="Tille- Bailey&Scott`s">{{cite book|last1=Tille P.|title=Bailey & Scott's Diagnostic Microbiology|date=2014|publisher=Elsevier.|isbn=978-0-323-08330-0|edition=13th.}}</ref>


[[File:Streptococcus agalactiae.tif|thumb|''Streptococcus agalactiae''- Gram stain]]
Group B ''Streptococcus'' (GBS) is a part of normal flora of the gut, about (15-20%) in the genital tract and is found in 20–40% women. It may be harmful to both mother and the baby itself. Maternal colonisation by this organism may result in neonatal death due to severe neonatal infection. It may also result in maternal death, though only occasionally, by causing upper genital tract infection that progresses to septicemia. Carriage of the organism is often asymptomatic.<ref>Obstetrics by Ten Teachers, 18th edition{{page needed|date=April 2012}}</ref>
[[File:Streptococcus agalactiae on blood agar.JPG|thumb|β-haemolytic colonies of ''Streptococcus agalactiae'', blood agar 18h at 36°C]]


''S. agalactiae'' is the [[species]] designation for streptococci belonging to the group B of the [[Rebecca Lancefield]] classification of streptococci ([[Lancefield grouping]]). GBS is surrounded by a [[bacterial capsule]] composed of [[polysaccharides]] ([[exopolysaccharides]]). GBS are subclassified into ten [[serotypes]] (Ia, Ib, II–IX) depending on the immunologic reactivity of their polysaccharide capsule.
Newborn GBS disease is separated into early-onset disease, which occurs in the first seven days after birth, and late-onset disease, which starts between seven and 90 days after birth. Early-onset septicemia is more prone to accompaniment by pneumonia. This is believed due to aspiration of GBS during birth, while late-onset septicemia is more often accompanied by meningitis.
<ref name="Edwards 2011">{{cite book|last1=Edwards MS, Nizet V.|title=Group B streptococcal infections. Infectious Diseases of the Fetus and Newborn Infant|date=2011|publisher=Elsevier|isbn=978-0-443-06839-3|pages=419-469.|edition=7th.}}</ref>
<ref name="Bergey`s Whiley" />
<ref name="Slotved 2007">{{cite journal|last1=Slotved HC, Kong F, Lambertsen L, Sauer S, Gilbert GL.|title=Serotype IX, a proposed new Streptococcus agalactiae serotype|journal=J Clin Microbiol.|date=2007|volume=45|pages=2929-2936|url=http://jcm.asm.org/content/45/9/2929.full.pdf}}</ref>
As other virulent bacteria, GBS harbours an important number of [[virulence factors]],
<ref name="Maisey 2009">{{cite journal|last1=Maisey HC, Doran KS, Nizet V.|title=Recent advances in understanding the molecular basis of group B Streptococcus virulence|journal=Expert Rev Mol Med.|date=2009|volume=10|pages=e27|doi=10.1017/S1462399408000811|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2676346/pdf/nihms-110577.pdf}}</ref>
the most important are the capsular polysaccharide (rich in [[sialic acid]]), and a pore-forming [[toxin]], β-[[haemolysin]].
<ref name="Rajagopal 2009">{{cite journal|last1=Rajagopal L.|title=Understanding the regulation of Group B Streptococcal virulence factors.|journal=Future Microbiol|date=2009|volume=4|pages=201-221|doi=10.2217/17460913.4.2.201|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2691590/pdf/nihms114724.pdf}}</ref>
The GBS capsule is probably the key virulence factor because it helps GBS escape from host defence mechanisms interfering with [[phagocytic]] killing of GBS by human [[phagocytes]].
<ref name="Edwards 2011"/>
<ref name="Rajagopal 2009"/>
The GBS β-haemolysin is considered identical to the GBS pigment.
<ref name="Whidbey 2013">{{cite journal|last1=Whidbey C, Harrell MI, Burnside K, Ngo L, Becraft AK, Iyer LM, Aravind L, Hitti J, Waldorf KM, Rajagopal L.|title=A hemolytic pigment of Group B Streptococcus allows bacterial penetration of human placenta.|journal=J Exp Med|date=2013|volume=210|pages=1265-1281|url=http://jem.rupress.org/content/210/6/1265.full.pdf+html}}</ref>
<ref name="Rosa-Fraile 2014">{{cite journal|last1=Rosa-Fraile M, Dramsi S, Spellerberg B.|title=Group B streptococcal haemolysin and pigment, a tale of twins.|journal=FEMS Microbiol Rev.|date=2014|volume=38.|pages=932-946.|url=http://femsre.oxfordjournals.org/content/femsre/38/5/932.full.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Whidbey 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Whidbey C, Vornhagen J, Gendrin C, Boldenow E, Samson JM, Doering K, Ngo L, Ezekwe EA Jr, Gundlach JH, Elovitz MA, Liggitt D, Duncan JA, Adams Waldorf KM, Rajagopal L.|title=A streptococcal lipid toxin induces membrane permeabilization and pyroptosis leading to fetal injury.|journal=EMBO Mol Med.|date=2015|volume=7|pages=488-505|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4403049/pdf/emmm0007-0488.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Whidbey PhDTh">{{cite book|last1=Christopher-Mychael Whidbey|title=Characterization of the Group B Streptococcus Hemolysin and its Role in Intrauterine Infection|date=2015|publisher=University of Washington|url=https://digital.lib.washington.edu/researchworks/bitstream/handle/1773/33228/Whidbey_washington_0250E_14193.pdf}}</ref>


== '''IDENTIFICATION OF GBS IN THE LABORATORY'''==
===Positive culture===
As mentioned, ''Streptococcus agalactiae'' is a gram-positive coccus with a tendency to form chains, beta-haemolytic, catalase-negative, and facultative anaerobe. GBS grows readily on blood agar plates as microbial colonies surrounded by a narrow zone of β-[[haemolysis]].
25% of women are colonized with GBS in the vagina or rectum.<ref name="cdcwebsite">
GBS is characterized by the presence in the [[cell wall]] of the group B [[antigen]] of the [[Lancefield classification]] ([[Lancefield grouping]]) that can be detected directly in intact bacteria using latex agglutination tests.
{{cite web
<ref name="Tille- Bailey&Scott`s" />
| title = Preventing Group B Strep: Are You Pregnant? Protect your baby from group B strep!
The [[CAMP test]] is also another important test for identification of GBS. The CAMP factor acts synergistically with the staphylococcal β-haemolysin inducing enhanced haemolysis of sheep or bovine [[erythrocytes]].
| publisher=Center for Disease Control and Prevention
<ref name="Tille- Bailey&Scott`s" />
| date = 2004-02-09
[[Image:CAMP test.JPG|thumb|200px|right|Positive CAMP test indicated by the formation of an arrowhead where ''Streptococcus agalactiae'' meets the ''Staphylococcus aureus'' (white middle streak)]]
| url = http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/
GBS is also able to hydrolyse [[hippurate]] and this test can also be used to identify presumptively GBS. Haemolytic GBS strains produce an orange-brick-red non-[[isoprenoid]] [[polyene]] pigment (ornythinrhamnododecaene) ([[granadaene]]) when cultivated on [[granada medium]] that allows its straightforward identification.
| format = PDF
<ref name="Rosa-Fraile 1999">{{cite journal|last1=Rosa-Fraile M, Rodriguez-Granger J, Cueto-Lopez M, Sampedro A, Biel Gaye E, Haro M , Andreu A.|title=Use of Granada medium to detect group B streptococcal colonization in pregnant women|journal=J Clin Microbiol.|date=1999|volume=37.|pages=2674-2677.|url=http://jcm.asm.org/content/37/8/2674.full.pdf}}</ref>
| accessdate = 2007-10-18 }}
[[File:S agalactiae vagino-rectal culture GRANADA.png|thumb|Red colonies of ''S.agalactiae'' in granada agar. Vagino-rectal culture 18h incubation 36°C anaerobiosis]]
</ref> Since the bacteria can come and go, testing for GBS is recommended by US public health protocols at the 36 week [[antenatal]] appointment of every pregnancy. The [[vagina]] and [[rectum]] are swabbed and cultures grown in enriched culture media. In the UK, cultures are not routinely taken from pregnant women for testing, but rather women are treated according to their risk in labor – [[antibiotics]] are given to women where GBS has been found incidentally from their urine or vaginal/rectal swabs taken during the pregnancy, women who have previously had a baby infected with GBS disease, women whose membranes are ruptured more than 18 hours and those who have fever in labor. In some countries, including the UK, suboptimal culture methods are used, which result in up to half of women carrying GBS, given a false-negative test result. Treatment of GBS positive women with intravenous [[penicillin G]] or Ampicillin at the onset of labor and then again at every four hours reduces early onset infection,<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1002/14651858.CD000115.pub2 |title=Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews: Intrapartum antibiotics for Group B streptococcal colonisation |year=2010 |last1=Smaill |first1=Fiona M. |pmid=10796138 |issue=2 |pages=CD000115 |journal=Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews}}</ref> but research has shown that treatment at least 2 hours prior to birth may also reduce the risk of neonatal infection.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1067/mob.2001.113875 |title=The effectiveness of risk-based intrapartum chemoprophylaxis for the prevention of early-onset neonatal group B streptococcal disease |year=2001 |last1=Lin |first1=F |journal=American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology |volume=184 |issue=6 |pages=1204–10 |pmid=11349189 |last2=Brenner |first2=RA |last3=Johnson |first3=YR |last4=Azimi |first4=PH |last5=Philips Jb |first5=3rd |last6=Regan |first6=JA |last7=Clark |first7=P |last8=Weisman |first8=LE |last9=Rhoads |first9=GG|last10=Kong |first10=Fanhui |last11=Clemens |first11=John D. |display-authors=8 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0029-7844(97)00587-5 |title=Timing of Intrapartum Ampicillin and Prevention of Vertical Transmission of Group B Streptococcus |year=1998 |last1=De Cueto |first1=M |journal=Obstetrics & Gynecology |volume=91 |pmid=9464732 |pages=112–4 |last2=Sanchez |first2=MJ |last3=Sampedro |first3=A |last4=Miranda |first4=JA |last5=Herruzo |first5=AJ |last6=Rosa-Fraile |first6=M |issue=1}}</ref> For women known to carry GBS where it is not expected that the intravenous antibiotics can be given for at least four hours before delivery, an intramuscular injection of 4.8 MU (2.9 g) of Penicillin G at about 35 weeks of pregnancy may be useful in addition to intravenous antibiotics given from the onset of labour or membranes rupturing at intervals until delivery to try to eradicate GBS colonisation until after the baby is born.
Identification of GBS could also be carried out easily using modern methods for identifying bacteria as MALDI-TOF (Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry).
<ref name="Binghuai 2014">{{cite journal|last1=Binghuai L, Yanli S, Shuchen Z, Fengxia Z, Dong L, Yanchao C.|title=Use of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry for rapid identification of group B Streptococcus on chromID Strepto B agar|journal=International Journal of Infectious Diseases (IJID)|date=2014|volume=27|pages=44-48|doi=10.1016/j.ijid.2014.06.023|url=http://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(14)01586-0/pdf}}</ref>


== '''GBS COLONIZATION AND INFECTION''' ==
Where insufficient intravenous antibiotics are given before delivery, the baby may be given antibiotics immediately after birth, although evidence is inconclusive as to whether this is necessary or effective.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1002/14651858.CD003667.pub2 |title=Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews: Intramuscular penicillin for the prevention of early onset group B streptococcal infection in newborn infants |year=2004 |last1=Woodgate |first1=Paul G. |last2=Flenady |first2=Vicki |last3=Steer |first3=Peter A. |journal=Reviews}}</ref> Some maternity units take a watchful approach for 24–48 hours, only giving antibiotics if the baby shows any symptoms of infection,<ref>http://www.rcog.org.uk/files/rcog-corp/uploaded-files/neonatal_audit_full_250507.pdf{{full|date=November 2012}}</ref> or if there is laboratory evidence on [[complete blood count]] or culture of infection. If a woman presents late in her [[prenatal]] period then there may be no time to grow cultures prior to labor, or she may present in active labor without documentation of prenatal care. In this situation, some clinicians advocate [[empirical]] antibiotic coverage of mother and baby, although most would only advocate antibiotics for the mother if other recognized risk factors were present.
Almost always, GBS is an innocuous [[commensal]] bacterium that colonizes the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract of humans. In different studies, GBS vaginal colonization rate ranges from 4 to 36%, with most studies reporting rates over 20%. These variations in the reported prevalence of [[asymptomatic]] (presenting no symptoms of disease) colonization could be related to the different detection methods used, and differences in populations studied.
<ref name="Barcaite 2008">{{cite journal|last1=Barcaite E, Bartusevicius A, Tameliene R, Kliucinskas M, Maleckiene L, Nadisauskiene R.|title=Prevalence of maternal group B streptococcal colonisation in European countries|journal=Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand.|date=2008|volume=87|pages=260-271|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18307064}}</ref>
<ref name="Rodriguez-Granger 2012">{{cite journal|last1=Rodriguez-Granger J, Alvargonzalez JC, Berardi A, Berner R, Kunze M, Hufnagel M, Melin P, Decheva A, Orefici G, Poyart C, Telford J, Efstratiou A, Killian M, Krizova P, Baldassarri L, Spellerberg B, Puertas A, Rosa-Fraile M.|title=Prevention of group B streptococcal neonatal disease revisited. The DEVANI European project.|journal=Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis.|date=2012|volume=31|pages=2097-2114|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Rodriguez-Granger+J%2C+Alvargonzalez+JC%2C+Berardi+A%2C}}</ref>
<ref name="Verani 2010">{{cite journal|last1=Verani JR, McGee L, Schrag SJ. 59(RR-10): 1–32.|title=Prevention of perinatal group B streptococcal disease: revised guidelines from CDC.|journal=MMWR Recomm Rep.|date=2010|volume=59(RR-10):|url=http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr5910.pdf}}</ref>


Though GBS is an asymptomatic colonizer of the gastrointestinal human tract in up to 30% of otherwise healthy adults, including pregnant women,
===Prevention===
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP) is recommended for:<ref name=cdc2010>{{cite web|url=http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/guidelines/new-differences.html|title=GBS - Prevention Guidelines-Changes Last Rel - Group B Strep - CDC|work=cdc.gov}}</ref>
<ref name="Barcaite 2008" />
*Women who delivered a previous infant with GBS disease
this opportunistic harmless bacterium can, in some circumstances, cause severe invasive infections.
*Women with GBS bacteriuria in the current pregnancy
<ref name="Edwards 2010" />
*Women with a GBS-positive screening result in the current pregnancy
*Women with unknown GBS status who deliver at less than 37 weeks’ gestation, have an intrapartum temperature of 38°C (100.4°F) or greater, or have rupture of membranes for 18 hours or longer.


== '''GBS AND PREGNANCY''' ==
[[Penicillin]] is the preferred agent for intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis, and [[ampicillin]] is an acceptable alternative.<ref name=cdc2010/>
Though GBS colonization is [[asymptomatic]] and, in general, in healthy women during pregnancy, does not cause problems it can sometimes cause serious illness for the mother and the baby during gestation and after delivery. GBS infections in the mother can cause [[chorioamnionitis]] (intra-amniotic infection or severe infection of the placental tissues) infrequently, and postpartum infections (after birth). GBS [[urinary tract infections]] (UTI) may induce labour and cause premature delivery ([[preterm birth]]).
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />


=== '''<big>Newborns</big>''' ===
Simple anti-septic wipes do not prevent mother-to-child transmission.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61339-8 |title=Chlorhexidine maternal-vaginal and neonate body wipes in sepsis and vertical transmission of pathogenic bacteria in South Africa: A randomised, controlled trial |year=2009 |last1=Cutland |first1=Clare L |last2=Madhi |first2=Shabir A |last3=Zell |first3=Elizabeth R |last4=Kuwanda |first4=Locadiah |last5=Laque |first5=Martin |last6=Groome |first6=Michelle |last7=Gorwitz |first7=Rachel |last8=Thigpen |first8=Michael C |last9=Patel |first9=Roopal |last10=Velaphi |first10=Sithembiso C |last11=Adrian |first11=Peter |last12=Klugman |first12=Keith |last13=Schuchat |first13=Anne |last14=Schrag |first14=Stephanie J |last15=Pops Trial |first15=Team |journal=The Lancet |volume=374 |issue=9705 |pmid=19846212 |pages=1909–16|display-authors=8 }}</ref> Up to 90% of early-onset GBS infection would be preventable if intravenous antibiotics were offered in labour to all GBS carriers identified by universal sensitive testing late in pregnancy plus to the mothers of babies in the recognised higher risk situations.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1136/jms.9.4.191 |title=Maternal screening to prevent neonatal Group B streptococcal disease |year=2002 |journal=Journal of Medical Screening |volume=9 |issue=4 |pages=191}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.siny.2011.03.005 |title=Myth: Group B streptococcal infection in pregnancy: Comprehended and conquered |year=2011 |last1=Steer |first1=P.J. |last2=Plumb |first2=J. |journal=Seminars in Fetal and Neonatal Medicine |volume=16 |issue=5 |pages=254–8 |pmid=21493170}}</ref> Early onset GBS infection is most likely to present with breathing problems and pneumonia; late onset GBS infection is more likely to present with meningitis and septicaemia. Once symptoms are present, the condition can be difficult to treat.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2007.01.004 |title=An overview of the natural history of early onset group B streptococcal disease in the UK |year=2007 |last1=Colbourn |first1=Tim |last2=Gilbert |first2=Ruth |journal=Early Human Development |volume=83 |issue=3 |pages=149–56 |pmid=17300884}}</ref>


In the western world, GBS (in the absence of effective prevention measures) is the main cause of bacterial infections in newborns, such as [[septicemia]], [[pneumonia]], and [[meningitis]], which can lead to death or long-term [[sequelae]].
==Cause==
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
[[Streptococcus]] is a [[genus]] of [[spherical]], [[gram-positive]] bacteria of the [[phylum]] [[Firmicutes]]. ''[[Streptococcus agalactiae]]'' is a [[gram-positive]] streptococcus characterized by the presence of Group B [[Rebecca Lancefield|Lancefield antigen]], and so takes the name Group B Streptococcus. S. agalactiae's polysaccharide antiphagocytic capsule is its main virulence factor.
<ref name="Libster 2012">{{cite journal|last1=Libster R, Edwards KM, Levent F, Edwards MS, Rench MA, Castagnini LA, Cooper T, Sparks RC, Baker CJ, Shah PE.|title= Long-term outcomes of group B streptococcal meningitis|journal=Pediatrics|date=2012|volume=130|pages=e8-15|url=http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/pediatrics/130/1/e8.full.pdf}}</ref>
==Diagnosis==
Babies at greatest risk of developing GBS disease are those born to women who carry GBS during labour. Testing women during pregnancy for GBS is not currently done in the UK, allegedly because of the costs and logistics involved. Research has shown that testing pregnant women, using the more sensitive ECM tests, and giving antibiotics in labour to those carrying GBS and to high-risk women, was significantly more cost-effective than using a risk-factor approach. One research paper calculated an expected net benefit to the Government of such an approach at around £37&nbsp;million a year, compared with the current [[RCOG]] approach<ref name="Colbourn2007">{{cite journal |pmid=17651659 |year=2007 |last1=Colbourn |first1=T |last2=Asseburg |first2=C |last3=Bojke |first3=L |last4=Philips |first4=Z |last5=Claxton |first5=K |last6=Ades |first6=AE |last7=Gilbert |first7=RE |title=Prenatal screening and treatment strategies to prevent group B streptococcal and other bacterial infections in early infancy: Cost-effectiveness and expected value of information analyses |volume=11 |issue=29 |pages=1–226, iii |journal=Health technology assessment |doi=10.3310/hta11290}}</ref><ref name=pmid17848402>{{cite journal |doi=10.1136/bmj.39325.681806.AD |title=Preventive strategies for group B streptococcal and other bacterial infections in early infancy: Cost effectiveness and value of information analyses |year=2007 |last1=Colbourn |first1=T. E |last2=Asseburg |first2=C. |last3=Bojke |first3=L. |last4=Philips |first4=Z. |last5=Welton |first5=N. J |last6=Claxton |first6=K. |last7=Ades |first7=A E |last8=Gilbert |first8=R. E |journal=BMJ |volume=335 |issue=7621 |pages=655 |pmid=17848402 |pmc=1995477}}</ref>


GBS infections in newborns are separated into two clinical types, early-onset disease (GBS-EOD) and late-onset disease (GBS-LOD). GBS-EOD manifests from 0 to 7 living days in the newborn, most of the cases of EOD being apparent within 24 h from birth. GBS-LOD starts between seven and 90 days after birth.
GBS tests are performed by using a swab test. Swabs are ideally taken from the lower vagina and rectum at 35–37 weeks of pregnancy.<ref name="autogenerated1999">{{cite journal |doi=10.1542/peds.103.6.e77 |title=Risk Factors for Early-onset Group B Streptococcal Sepsis: Estimation of Odds Ratios by Critical Literature Review |year=1999 |last1=Benitz |first1=W. E. |last2=Gould |first2=J. B. |last3=Druzin |first3=M. L. |journal=Pediatrics |volume=103 |issue=6 |pages=e77 |pmid=10353974}}</ref> They can be taken by healthcare professionals, or by the mother, following simple instructions.<ref name="Hicks2009">{{cite journal |doi=10.3122/jabfm.2009.02.080011 |title=Patient Self-Collection of Group B Streptococcal Specimens During Pregnancy |year=2009 |last1=Hicks |first1=P. |last2=Diaz-Perez |first2=M. J. |journal=The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine |volume=22 |issue=2 |pages=136–140}}</ref>
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
<ref name="Verani 2010" />


The most common clinical [[syndromes]] of GBS-EOD are septicemia without apparent location, pneumonia, and less frequently meningitis. [[Bacteremia]] without a focus occurs in 80-85%, pneumonia in 10% to 15% and meningitis in 5% to 10% of neonates suffering from GBS-EOD. The initial clinical findings are respiratory [[signs]] in more than 80% of cases. Neonates with meningitis often have an initial clinical presentation identical to presentation in those without meningeal affectation. An exam of the [[cerebrospinal fluid]] ([[CSF]]) is often necessary to rule out meningitis.
Routine screening of pregnant women is performed in many countries, including USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Belgium, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Hong Kong, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Argentina and Kenya. Published evidence has shown universally falling incidences of GBS infection in these countries following introduction of these screening-based preventive measures. A reliable test is not routinely offered within the NHS in the UK, and the number of GBS infections as a result is rising. Sensitive tests for GBS carriage are available privately in the UK and charity, [[Group B Strep Support]],{{full|date=November 2012}}<ref name="gbss">{{cite web|url=http://www.gbss.org.uk/test|title=Where can I get the ECM test?|work=gbss.org.uk}}</ref> lists those that adhere to the Health Protection Agency's Standard Operating Procedure (BSOP58) for processing these.<ref name="hpa-standardmethods">http://www.hpa-standardmethods.org.uk/documents/bsop/pdf/bsop58.pdf{{full|date=November 2012}}</ref> In the UK, only 1% of maternity units test for the presence of Group B Streptococcus.<ref>{{cite web |first1=RG |last1=Hughes |first2=B |last2=Stenson |year=2003 |title=Prevention of Early Onset Neonatal Group B Streptococcal Disease |url=http://www.rcog.org.uk/files/rcog-corp/uploaded-files/GT36GroupBStrep2003.pdf |publisher=Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists}}</ref>
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
<ref name="Polin 2012">{{cite journal|last1=Polin RA.|title=Management of Neonates With Suspected or Proven Early-Onset Bacterial Sepsis|journal=Pediatrics|date=2012|volume=129|pages=1006-1015|url=http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/pediatrics/129/5/1006.full.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Martinez 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Martinez E, Mintegi S, Vilar B, Martinez MJ, Lopez A, Catediano E, Gomez B.|title=Prevalence and predictors of bacterial meningitis in young infants with fever without a source.|journal=Pediatr Infect Dis J.|date=2015|volume=34|pages=494-498.|url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Martinez+E%2C+Mintegi+S%2C+Vilar+B%2C}}</ref>


Colonization with GBS during labour is the primary risk factor for development of GBS-EOD. GBS-EOD is acquired vertically ([[vertical transmission]]), through exposure of the fetus or the baby to GBS from the vagina of a colonized woman, either ''in utero'' (because of ascending infection) or during birth, after rupture of membranes. Infants can also be infected during passage through the birth canal, nevertheless, newborns that acquire GBS through this route can only become colonized, and these colonized infants usually do not develop GBS-EOD.
===Direct plating method===
If the swabs are processed directly on to laboratory plates and GBS is grown, then this positive result is very reliable. Special growth plates can be used that indicate the presence of GBS by a colour change.<ref name="gragar1">{{cite journal |pmid=10405415 |year=1999 |last1=Gil |first1=EG |last2=Rodríguez |first2=MC |last3=Bartolomé |first3=R |last4=Berjano |first4=B |last5=Cabero |first5=L |last6=Andreu |first6=A |title=Evaluation of the Granada agar plate for detection of vaginal and rectal group B streptococci in pregnant women |volume=37 |issue=8 |pages=2648–51 |pmc=85303 |journal=Journal of clinical microbiology}}</ref><ref name="gragar2">{{cite journal |doi=10.1046/j.1469-0691.2001.00156.x |title=Modified Granada Agar Medium for the detection of group B streptococcus carriage in pregnant women |year=2001 |last1=Claeys |first1=G. |last2=Verschraegen |first2=G. |last3=Temmerman |first3=M. |journal=Clinical Microbiology and Infection |volume=7 |pmid=11284939 |pages=22–4 |issue=1}}</ref> However, this method is very susceptible to giving false negative results when the swabs don't bring up GBS – this can be as high as 50% of samples,<ref name="autogenerated1999"/> leaving up to half of the pregnant women who were carrying GBS at the time the swab was taken under the false impression that they are not carrying GBS and their baby is not at risk.


Roughly, 50% of newborns to GBS colonized mothers are also GBS colonized and (without prevention measures) 1% to 2% of these newborns will develop GBS-EOD.
===Enriched culture medium===
<ref name="Boyer 1985">{{cite journal|last1=Boyer KM, Gotoff SP.|title=Strategies for chemoprophylaxis of GBS early-onset infections|journal=Antibiot Chemother.|date=1985|volume=35|page=267-280.}}</ref>
To reduce the number of false negative results, the laboratory can take an extra step to improve the accuracy of the test. This involves growing the samples in an enriched medium to improve the viability of the GBS in the same as opposed to the other naturally occurring bacteria. This usually takes 24–48 hours. Following this, the sample is plated as before, to determine whether GBS is present. This enriched culture medium (or ECM) method is the "Gold Standard" of GBS testing and is the best GBS test currently available.<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=21088663 |year=2010 |last1=Verani |first1=JR |last2=McGee |first2=L |last3=Schrag |first3=SJ |last4=Division Of Bacterial Diseases |first4=National Center for Immunization Respiratory Diseases |title=Prevention of perinatal group B streptococcal disease--revised guidelines from CDC, 2010 |volume=59 |issue=RR–10 |pages=1–36 |journal=MMWR. Recommendations and reports}}</ref> It may miss a very small number of women who carry GBS, though it does not give false positives. It is the method described by the Heath Protection Agency's BSOP58,<ref name="hpa-standardmethods" /> Processing swabs for group B Streptococcal carriage. The ECM test is believed to be offered on a handful of UK NHS hospitals, including the [[Royal Shrewsbury Hospital]], [[John Radcliffe Hospital]], Princess Elizabeth (Guernsey) and [[Royal Free Hospital]].<ref>http://gbss.org.uk/sub_sub_section.php?section_id=3&sub_sub_id=21&sub_id=121&content=ECM%20test.%20Where%20&%20how?</ref> The test is also available privately, for around £32 for a UK-wide postal service.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.medisave.co.uk/group-b-streptococcus-screening-test-p-7896.html?gclid=CP7Z276TwbICFQfMtAod0mUAGQ|title=Group B Streptococcus Screening Test|work=Medisave UK Ltd}}</ref> Organisations that offer the test privately and follow the HPA's BSOP58 are listed on the website of charity Group B Strep Support.<ref name="gbss" /> The ECM test costs more than the direct plating method, due to the extra step involved, and would requirea change both in antenatal care and in what is available from laboratories serving the NHS. However, none of the constituent parts of the ECM tests are difficult to obtain or expensive, and the tests has proven safe over decades of use in other countrines. The implememtation of standardised ECM testing nationally in the UK is a viable option. At present, culture for GBS (using enriched culture medium) at 35–37 weeks to define an at-risk group is the most cost-effective strategy currently practicable.<ref name=pmid17848402/><ref name=pmid21040389>{{cite journal |doi=10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02725.x |title=Intrapartum tests for group B streptococcus: Accuracy and acceptability of screening |year=2011 |last1=Daniels |first1=JP |last2=Gray |first2=J |last3=Pattison |first3=HM |last4=Gray |first4=R |last5=Hills |first5=RK |last6=Khan |first6=KS |journal=BJOG: an International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology |volume=118 |issue=2 |pmid=21040389 |pages=257–65 |last7=Gbs Collaborative |first7=Group}}</ref><ref name="Kaambwa2010">{{cite journal |doi=10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02752.x |title=Cost-effectiveness of rapid tests and other existing strategies for screening and management of early-onset group B streptococcus during labour |year=2010 |last1=Kaambwa |first1=B |last2=Bryan |first2=S |last3=Gray |first3=J |last4=Milner |first4=P |last5=Daniels |first5=J |last6=Khan |first6=KS |last7=Roberts |first7=TE |journal=BJOG: an International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology |volume=117 |issue=13 |pmid=19187367 |pages=357–65}}</ref>
In the past, the incidence of GBS-EOD ranged from 0.7 to 3.7 per thousand live births in the US,
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
and from 0.2 to 3.25 per thousand in Europe.
<ref name="Rodriguez-Granger 2012" />
In 2008, after widespread use of antenatal screening and intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis, the [[Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]] of United States (CDC) reported an incidence of 0.28 cases of GBS-EOD per thousand live births in the US.
<ref name="CDC 2015">{{cite web|last1=CDC|title=Group B Strep (GBS)-Clinical Overview|url=http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/clinicians/clinical-overview.html|accessdate=10 January 2016}}</ref>


Though maternal GBS colonization is the key determinant for GBS-EOD, other factors also increase the risk. These factors comprise:
===PCR intrapartum testing===
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
No current cultured based tests are both accurate enough and fast enough to recommend for detecting GBS once labour starts. Plating of swab samples requires time for the bacteria to proliferate, meaning it is unsuitable as an intrapartum test. An alternative method is the Polymerase Chain Reaction (or PCR) method. In-labour PCR testing for GBS carriage could in future be sufficiently sensitive to guide offering of antibiotics in labour, but the technique must be improved and simplified to make the method cost effective.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />


--Onset of labour before 37 weeks of gestation ([[premature birth]]).
Testing women for GBS colonisation using vaginal or rectal swabs at 35–37 weeks of gestation and culturing them in enriched media—as practised in many countries—may not be quite as sensitive as a PCR test in labour would be at predicting whether the pregnant woman is carrying GBS at delivery. It would, however, allow starting antibiotics on admission to the labour ward. The PCR technology must be simplified and sped up to be useful as a point-of care test.


--[[Prolonged rupture of membranes]] (longer duration of membrane rupture) (≥18 h before delivery).
==Prevention==
The use of vaginal [[chlorhexidine]] before delivery has been studied but has not been found to result in a significant benefit.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Ohlsson|first1=A|last2=Shah|first2=VS|last3=Stade|first3=BC|title=Vaginal chlorhexidine during labour to prevent early-onset neonatal group B streptococcal infection.|journal=The Cochrane database of systematic reviews|date=14 December 2014|volume=12|pages=CD003520|pmid=25504106|doi=10.1002/14651858.CD003520.pub3}}</ref>


--''Intrapartum'' (during childbirth) fever (>38 °C, >100.4 °F).


--Amniotic infections (chorioamnionitis).
==Epidemiology==

===UK===
--Young maternal age.
The following are estimates of the chances that a baby in Britain will be infected with Group B streptococcal infection (GBS) if no preventative measures are taken and no other risk factors are present:<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=10353974 |year=1999 |last1=Benitz |first1=WE |last2=Gould |first2=JB |last3=Druzin |first3=ML |title=Risk factors for early-onset group B streptococcal sepsis: Estimation of odds ratios by critical literature review |volume=103 |issue=6 |pages=e77 |journal=Pediatrics |doi=10.1542/peds.103.6.e77}}</ref>

* 1 in 1,000* where the woman is not a known GBS carrier
Nevertheless, most babies who develop GBS-EOD are born to GBS colonized mothers without any of these risk factors.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
Heavy GBS vaginal colonization is also associated with a higher risk for GBS-EOD.

Women who had one of these risk factors but who are not GBS colonized at labour are at low risk for GBS-EOD compared with women who were colonized prenatally but had none of the aforementioned risk factors.
<ref name="Boyer 1985" />

Presence of low levels of anticapsular [[antibodies]] against GBS in the mother are also of great importance for the development of GBS-EOD.
<ref name="Baker 1976">{{cite journal|last1=Baker CJ, Kasper DL.|title=Correlation of maternal antibody deficiency with susceptibility to neonatal infection with group B Streptococcus.|journal=N Eng J Med.|date=1976|volume=294|pages=753-756|url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/768760}}</ref>
<ref name="Baker 1981">{{cite journal|last1=Baker CJ, Edwards MS, Kasper DL.|title=Role of antibody to native type III polysaccharide of group B Streptococcus in infant infection.|journal=Pediatrics|date=1981|volume=68|pages=544-549|url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7033911}}</ref>
Because of that, a previous sibling with GBS-EOD is also an important risk factor for development of the infection in subsequent deliveries, probably reflecting the lack of protective antibodies in the mother.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

Overall, the case fatality rates from GBS-EOD have declined, from 50% observed in studies from the 1970s to between 2% and 10% in recent years, mainly as a consequence of improvements in therapy and management. Fatal neonatal infections by GBS are more frequent among premature infants.
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Edmond 2012">{{cite journal|last1=Edmond KM, Kortsalioudaki C, Scott S, Schrag SJ, Zaidi AK, Cousens S, Heath PT.|title=Group B streptococcal disease in infants aged younger than 3 months: systematic review and meta-analysis"|journal=Lancet.|date=2012|volume=279|pages=547–556|url=http://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journals/lancet/PIIS0140-6736(11)61651-6.pdf}}</ref>

GBS-LOD affects infants from 7 days to 3 months of age and has a lower [[case fatality rate]] (1%-6%) than GBS-EOD. Clinical syndromes of GBS-EOD are bacteremia without a focus (65%), meningitis (25%), [[cellulitis]], [[osteoarthritis]], and pneumonia.
Prematurity has been reported to be the main risk factor. Each week of decreasing gestation increases the risk by a factor of 1.34 for developing GBS-LOD.
<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lin FYC, Weisman LE ,Troendle J, Adams K.|title=Prematurity Is the Major Risk Factor for Late-Onset Group B Streptococcus Disease|journal=The Journal of Infectious Diseases.|date=2003|volume=188|pages=267-271|url=http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/188/2/267.full.pdf}}</ref>

GBS-LOD is not acquired through vertical transmission during delivery, it can be acquired later from the mother from breast milk or from environmental and community sources.
GBS-LOD commonly shows nonspecific [[signs]], and diagnosis should be made obtaining [[blood cultures]] in febrile newborns.
Hearing loss and mental impairment can be a long-term consequence of GBS meningitis.
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
<ref name="Libster 2012"/>

=== '''<big>Prevention of neonatal infection. Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP)</big>''' ===
Currently, the only reliable way to prevent GBS-EOD is intrapartum [[antibiotic prophylaxis]] (IAP). That is to say administration of antibiotics during delivery. It has been proved that intravenous [[penicillin]] or [[ampicillin]] given at the onset of labour and then again every four hours until delivery to GBS colonized women are very effective at preventing vertical transmission of GBS from mother to baby and GBS-EOD
(Penicillin G, 5 million units IV initial dose, then 2.5–3.0 million units every 4 hrs until delivery or Ampicillin, 2 g IV initial dose, then 1 g IV every 4 hrs until delivery).
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

It has been indicated that penicillin-[[allergic]] women without a history of [[anaphylaxis]] ([[angioedema]], [[respiratory distress]] or [[urticaria]]) following administration of a penicillin or a [[cephalosporin]] (low risk of anaphylaxis) could receive [[cefazolin]] (2g IV initial dose, then 1 g IV every 8 hrs until delivery) instead of penicillin or ampicillin.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

[[Clindamycin]] (900 mg IV every 8 hrs until delivery), and [[vancomycin]] (1 g IV every 12 hrs until delivery) are used to prevent GBS-EOD in infants born to penicillin-allergic mothers.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

[[Erythromycin]] is not recommended for IAP under any circumstances today.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

[[Antibiotic susceptibility testing]] (AST) of GBS isolates is crucial for appropriate antibiotic selection for IAP in penicillin-allergic women, because resistance to clindamycin, the most common agent used (in penicillin-allergic women), is increasing among GBS isolates. Appropriate methodologies for testing are important, because resistance to clyndamicin ([[antimicrobial resistance]]) can occur in some GBS strains that appear susceptible ([[antibiotic sensitivity]]) in certain susceptibility tests.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

It has been shown that if appropriate IAP in GBS colonized women starts at least 2 hours before delivery the risk of neonatal infection is also somehow reduced.
<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1067/mob.2001.113875 |title=The effectiveness of risk-based intrapartum chemoprophylaxis for the prevention of early-onset neonatal group B streptococcal disease |year=2001 |last1=Lin |first1=F |journal=American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology |volume=184 |issue=6 |pages=1204–10 |pmid=11349189 |last2=Brenner |first2=RA |last3=Johnson |first3=YR |last4=Azimi |first4=PH |last5=Philips Jb |first5=3rd |last6=Regan |first6=JA |last7=Clark |first7=P |last8=Weisman |first8=LE |last9=Rhoads |first9=GG|last10=Kong |first10=Fanhui |last11=Clemens |first11=John D. |display-authors=8 }}</ref>
<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0029-7844(97)00587-5 |title=Timing of Intrapartum Ampicillin and Prevention of Vertical Transmission of Group B Streptococcus |year=1998 |last1=De Cueto |first1=M |journal=Obstetrics & Gynecology |volume=91 |pmid=9464732 |pages=112–4 |last2=Sanchez |first2=MJ |last3=Sampedro |first3=A |last4=Miranda |first4=JA |last5=Herruzo |first5=AJ |last6=Rosa-Fraile |first6=M |issue=1}}</ref>
<ref name="Berardi 2011">{{cite journal|last1=Berardi A, Rossi C, Biasini A, Minniti S, Venturelli C, Ferrari F, Facchinetti F.|title=Efficacy of intrapartum chemoprophylaxis less than 4 hours duration.|journal=J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med.|date=2011|volume=24|pages=619-625|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Berardi+A%2C+Rossi+C%2C+Biasini+A%2C+Minniti+S%2C}}</ref>

True penicillin-allergy is rare with an estimated frequency of anaphylaxis of 1 to 5 episodes per 10,000 cases of penicillin therapy.
<ref name="Bhattacharya 2010">{{cite journal|last1=Bhattacharya S.|title=The facts about Penicillin Allergy: A Review|journal=J Adv Pharm Technol Res.|date=2010|volume=1|pages=11-17|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3255391/}}</ref>
Penicillin administered to a woman with no history of [[β-lactam]] allergy has a risk of anaphylaxis of 4/10,000 to 4/100,000. Maternal anaphylaxis associated with GBS IAP occurs, but any morbidity associated with anaphylaxis is offset greatly by reductions in the incidence of GBS-EOD.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

Home births are becoming increasingly popular in the UK. Recommendations for preventing GBS infections in newborns are the same for home births as for hospital births. Around 25% of women having home births probably carry GBS in their vagina at delivery without knowing. And it could be difficult to follow correctly the recommendations of IAP and to deal with the risk of a severe allergic reaction to the antibiotics outside of a hospital setting.
<ref name="GBS home birth">{{cite web|last1=GROUP B STREP SUPPORT|title=FAQs35. Carrying GBS and home birth?|url=http://gbss.org.uk/who-we-are/about-gbs/what-is-gbs/faqs/|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

IAP have been considered to be associated with the emergence of resistant bacterial strains and with an increase in the incidence of early-onset infections caused by other pathogens, mainly [[Gram-negative]] bacteria such as ''[[Escherichia coli]]''. Nevertheless, most studies have not found an increased rate of non-GBS early-onset sepsis related to the widespread use of IAP.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Baltimore 2001">{{cite journal|last1=Baltimore RS, Huie SM, Meek JI, Schuchat A, O'Brien KL|title=Early-onset neonatal sepsis in the era of group B streptococcal prevention.|journal=Pediatrics.|date=2001|volume=108|pages=1094-1098|url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Baltimore+RS%2C+Huie+SM%2C+Meek+JI%2C}}</ref>
<ref name="Sutkin 2005">{{cite journal|last1=Sutkin G, Krohn MA, Heine RP, Sweet RL.|title=Antibiotic prophylaxis and non-group B streptococcal neonatal sepsis.|journal=Obstet Gynecol.|date=2005|volume=105|pages=581-586|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Sutkin+G%2C+Krohn+MA%2C+Heine+RP}}</ref>
<ref name="Schrag&Hadler 2006">{{cite journal|last1=Schrag SJ, Hadler JL, Arnold KE, Martell-Cleary P, Reingold A, Schuchat A.|title=Risk factors for invasive, early-onset Escherichia coli infections in the era of widespread intrapartum antibiotic use.|journal=Pediatrics|date=2006|volume=118|pages=560-566|url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16882809}}</ref>

Other strategies to prevent GBS-EOD have been studied, and [[chlorhexidine]] intrapartum vaginal cleansing has been proposed to help preventing GBS-EOD, nevertheless there is no evidence of the effectiveness of this approach.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61339-8 |title=Chlorhexidine maternal-vaginal and neonate body wipes in sepsis and vertical transmission of pathogenic bacteria in South Africa: A randomised, controlled trial |year=2009 |last1=Cutland |first1=Clare L |last2=Madhi |first2=Shabir A |last3=Zell |first3=Elizabeth R |last4=Kuwanda |first4=Locadiah |last5=Laque |first5=Martin |last6=Groome |first6=Michelle |last7=Gorwitz |first7=Rachel |last8=Thigpen |first8=Michael C |last9=Patel |first9=Roopal |last10=Velaphi |first10=Sithembiso C |last11=Adrian |first11=Peter |last12=Klugman |first12=Keith |last13=Schuchat |first13=Anne |last14=Schrag |first14=Stephanie J |last15=Pops Trial |first15=Team |journal=The Lancet |volume=374 |issue=9705 |pmid=19846212 |pages=1909–16|display-authors=8 }}</ref>
<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Ohlsson|first1=A|last2=Shah|first2=VS|last3=Stade|first3=BC|title=Vaginal chlorhexidine during labour to prevent early-onset neonatal group B streptococcal infection.|journal=The Cochrane database of systematic reviews|date=14 December 2014|volume=12|pages=CD003520|pmid=25504106|doi=10.1002/14651858.CD003520.pub3}}</ref>

=== '''<big>Identifying candidates to receive intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis</big>''' ===
There are two ways to select female candidates to IAP: the '''culture-based screening approach''' and the '''risk-based approach'''.
<ref name="CDC 1996">{{cite journal|last1=CDC|title=Prevention of Perinatal Group B Streptococcal Disease: A Public Health Perspective|journal=MMWR|date=1996|volume=45-RR7|pages=1-24|url=http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00043277.htm}}</ref>
The culture-based screening approach identifies candidates using lower vaginal and rectal cultures obtained between 35 and 37 weeks of gestation, and IAP is administered to all GBS colonized women.
The risk-based strategy identifies candidates to receive IAP by the aforementioned risk factors known to increase the probability of GBS-EOD without considering if the mother is or is not a GBS carrier.
<ref name="Edwards 2011" />
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Clifford 2011">{{cite journal|last1=Clifford V, Garland SM, Grimwood K.|title=Prevention of neonatal group B streptococcus disease in the 21st century.|journal=J Paediatr Child Health.|date=2011|volume=48|pages=808-815|url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Clifford+V%2C+Garland+SM%2C+Grimwood+K.}}</ref>

IAP is also recommended, when selecting candidates for IAP, for women with intrapartum risk factors if their GBS carrier status is not known at the time of delivery, and for women with GBS bacteriuria during their pregnancy, and for women who have had an infant with GBS-EOD previously.
The risk-based approach is, in general, less effective than the culture-based approach,
<ref name="Schrag 2002">{{cite journal|last1=Schrag SJ, Zell ER, Lynfield R, Roome A, Arnold KE, Craig AS, Harrison LH, Reingold A, Stefonek K, Smith G, Gamble M, Schuchat A; Active Bacterial Core Surveillance Team.|title=A population-based comparison of strategies to prevent early-onset group B streptococcal disease in neonates.|journal=N Eng J Med|date=2002|volume=347|pages=233-239|url=http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa020205}}</ref>
because in most cases GBS-EOD develops among newborns who have been born to mothers without risk factors.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Boyer 1985" />
<ref name="Gimenez 2015" />

IAP is not required for women undergoing planned caesarean section in the absence of labour and with intact membranes, irrespective of carriage of GBS.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="RCOG 2012" />

Routine screening of pregnant women is performed in most developed countries such as the United States, France, Spain, Belgium, Canada, and Australia. And data have shown falling incidences of GBS-EOD following the introduction of screening-based measures to prevent GBS-EOD.
<ref name="Rodriguez-Granger 2012" />
<ref name="Gimenez 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Giménez M, Sanfeliu I, Sierra M, Dopico E, Juncosa T, Andreu A, Lite J, Guardià C, Sánchez F, Bosch J.|first1=Article in Spanish.|title=Evolución de la sepsis neonatal precoz por Streptococcus agalactiae en el área de Barcelona (2004-2010). Análisis de los fallos del cumplimiento del protocolo de prevención. Group B streptococcal early-onset neonatal sepsis in the area of Barcelona (2004-2010). Analysis of missed opportunities for prevention.|journal=Enf Infect Microbiol Clin.|date=2015|volume=33|pages=446-450|url=http://apps.elsevier.es/watermark/ctl_servlet?_f=10&pident_articulo=90435502&pident_usuario=0&pcontactid=&pident_revista=28&ty=100&accion=L&origen=zonadelectura&web=www.elsevier.es&lan=es&fichero=28v33n07a90435502pdf001.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Phares 2008">{{cite journal|last1=Phares CR, Lynfield R, Farley MM, Mohle-Boetani J, Harrison LH, Petit S, Craig AS, Schaffner W, Zansky SM, Gershman K, Stefonek KR, Albanese BA, Zell ER, Schuchat A, Schrag SJ; Active Bacterial Core surveillance/Emerging Infections Program Network.|title=Epidemiology of Invasive Group B Streptococcal Disease in the United States, 1999-2005|journal=JAMA|date=2008|volume=299|pages=2056-2065|url=http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=181853}}</ref>

The risk-based strategy is advocated, among other counties, in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Argentina.
<ref name="Rodriguez-Granger 2012" />

In the UK, the [[Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists]] (RCOG) does not recommend bacteriological screening of pregnant women for antenatal GBS carriage.
<ref name="RCOG 2012">{{cite web|last1=Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists|title=The Prevention of Early-onset Neonatal Group B Streptococcal Disease.Green–top Guideline No. 36 2nd edition.2012|url=https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/gtg_36.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
<ref name="RCOG 2015">{{cite web|last1=Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists RCOG|title=Group B Streptococcal Disease, Early-onset (Green-top Guideline No. 36. Update December 2014)|url=https://www.rcog.org.uk/en/guidelines-research-services/guidelines/gtg36/|accessdate=20 November 2015}}</ref>
Instead, women are treated according to their risk in labour. IAP is given to women where GBS has been found from their urine or vaginal/rectal swabs taken during the pregnancy, and to women who have previously had a baby with GBS disease.
Immediate induction of labour and IAP should be offered to all women with prelabour rupture of membranes at 37 weeks of gestation or more, to women whose membranes are ruptured more than 18 hours and to those who have fever in labour. Women who are pyrexial in labour should be offered broad-spectrum antibiotics including an antibiotic appropriate for preventing EOD-GBS.
<ref name="RCOG 2012"/>
<ref name="Cochrane 2010">{{cite journal |doi=10.1002/14651858.CD000115.pub2 |title=Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews: Intrapartum antibiotics for Group B streptococcal colonisation |year=2010 |last1=Smaill |first1=Fiona M. |pmid=10796138 |issue=2 |pages=CD000115 |journal=Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews}}</ref>

The issue of cost-effectiveness of both strategies for identifying candidates for IAP is less clear-cut. And some studies have indicated that testing low risk women, plus IAP administered to high-risk women and those found to carry GBS is more cost-effective than the advocated current UK practice.
<ref name="Colbourn2007">{{cite journal |pmid=17651659 |year=2007 |last1=Colbourn |first1=T |last2=Asseburg |first2=C |last3=Bojke |first3=L |last4=Philips |first4=Z |last5=Claxton |first5=K |last6=Ades |first6=AE |last7=Gilbert |first7=RE |title=Prenatal screening and treatment strategies to prevent group B streptococcal and other bacterial infections in early infancy: Cost-effectiveness and expected value of information analyses |volume=11 |issue=29 |pages=1–226, iii |journal=Health technology assessment |doi=10.3310/hta11290}}</ref>
Other evaluations have also found the culture-based approach to be more cost-effective than the risk-based approach for the prevention of GBS-EOD.
<ref name=pmid17848402>{{cite journal |doi=10.1136/bmj.39325.681806.AD |title=Preventive strategies for group B streptococcal and other bacterial infections in early infancy: Cost effectiveness and value of information analyses |year=2007 |last1=Colbourn |first1=T. E |last2=Asseburg |first2=C. |last3=Bojke |first3=L. |last4=Philips |first4=Z. |last5=Welton |first5=N. J |last6=Claxton |first6=K. |last7=Ades |first7=A E |last8=Gilbert |first8=R. E |journal=BMJ |volume=335 |issue=7621 |pages=655 |pmid=17848402 |pmc=1995477}}</ref>
<ref name="Kaambwa 2010">{{cite journal|last1=Kaambwa B, Bryan S, Gray J, Milner P, Daniels J, Khan KS, Roberts TE.|title=Cost-effectiveness of rapid tests and other existing strategies for screening and management of early-onset group B streptococcus during labour.|journal=BJOG|date=2010|volume=117|pages=1616-1627.|url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02752.x/epdf}}</ref>

It has been reported that IAP will not prevent all cases of GBS-EOD. IAP efficacy is estimated at 80%. The risk-based prevention strategy does not prevent about 33% of cases with no risk factors.
<ref name="Vergnano 2010">{{cite journal|last1=Vergnano S, Embleton N, Collinson A, Menson E, Bedford Russell A, Heath P.|title=Missed opportunities for preventing group B streptococcus infection|journal=Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed|date=2010|volume=95|pages=F72-73|doi=10.1136/adc.2009.160333}}</ref>

It has also been proposed that testing pregnant women to detect GBS carriers, and giving IAP to those carrying GBS and to high-risk women, is significantly more cost-effective than the use of the risk-factor approach. One research paper calculated an expected net benefit to the UK Government of such an approach of around £37million a year, compared with the current RCOG approach.
<ref name="Colbourn2007"/>
<ref name=pmid17848402/>

In the UK, it has also been suggested that:

"For women known to carry GBS where it is not expected that the intravenous antibiotics can be given for at least 4 hours before delivery, an intramuscular injection of 4.8 MU (2.9 g) of Penicillin G at about 35 weeks of pregnancy may be useful in addition to intravenous antibiotics given from the onset of labour or membranes rupturing until delivery to try to eradicate GBS colonisation until after delivery".
<ref name="Home Birth">{{cite web|last1=Home Birth Reference Site.|title=Group B Strep and Home Birth|url=http://www.homebirth.org.uk/gbs.htm|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

However, this recommendation IS NOT supported by the present guidelines.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="RCOG 2012" />

It has also been pointed out that up to 90% of cases of GBS-EOD would be preventable if IAP were offered to all GBS carriers identified by universal screening late in pregnancy, plus to the mothers in higher risk situations.
<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.siny.2011.03.005 |title=Myth: Group B streptococcal infection in pregnancy: Comprehended and conquered |year=2011 |last1=Steer |first1=P.J. |last2=Plumb |first2=J. |journal=Seminars in Fetal and Neonatal Medicine |volume=16 |issue=5 |pages=254–8 |pmid=21493170}}</ref>

Where insufficient intravenous antibiotics are given before delivery, the baby may be given antibiotics immediately after birth, although evidence is inconclusive as to whether this practice is effective or not.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Siegel 1996">{{cite journal|last1=Siegel JD, Cushion NB.|title=Prevention of early-onset group B streptococcal disease: another look at single-dose penicillin at birth.|journal=Obstet Gynecol.|date=1996|volume=87|pages=692-698|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8677068}}</ref>
<ref name="Velaphi 2003">{{cite journal|last1=Velaphi S, Siegel JD, Wendel GD Jr, Cushion N, Eid WM, Sanchez PJ.|title=Early-onset group B streptococcal infection after a combined maternal and neonatal group B streptococcal chemoprophylaxis strategy.|journal=Pediatrics|date=2003|volume=111|pages=541–547|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Velaphi+S%2C+Siegel+JD%2C+Wendel+GD }}</ref>
<ref name="Woodgate 2004">{{cite journal|last1=Woodgate PG, Flenady V, Steer PA.|title=Intramuscular penicillin for the prevention of early onset group B streptococcal infection in newborn|journal=Cochrane Database Syst Rev.|date=2004|pages=CD003667|doi=10.1002/14651858.CD003667.pub2}}</ref>

[[File:Incidence of EOD & LOD GBS disease-CDC.tif|thumb|Falling incidence of EOD & LOD GBS disease in US-CDC]]

=== '''<big>Screening for GBS colonization in pregnancy</big>''' ===
Approximately 10%–30% of women are colonized with GBS during pregnancy. Nevertheless, during pregnancy colonization can be temporary, intermittent, or continual.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

Because the GBS colonization status of women can change during pregnancy, only cultures carried out ≤5 weeks before delivery predict quite accurately the GBS carrier status at delivery. In contrast, if the prenatal culture is carried out more than 5 weeks before delivery it is unreliable for accurately predicting the GBS carrier status at delivery. And because of that, testing for GBS colonization in pregnant women is recommended by the CDC guidelines at 35–37 weeks of gestation.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Valkenburg 2010">{{cite journal|last1=Valkenburg-van den Berg AW, Houtman-Roelofsen RL, Oostvogel PM, Dekker FW, Dorr PJ, Sprij AJ.|title=Timing of group B streptococcus screening in pregnancy: a systematic review.|journal=Gynecol Obstet.|date=2010|volume=69|pages=174-183|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Valkenburg-van+den+Berg+AW%2C+Houtman-Roelofsen+RL}}</ref>

The clinical samples recommended for culture of GBS are swabs collected from lower [[vagina]] and [[rectum]] through the [[external anal sphincter]]. The sample should be collected swabbing the lower vagina (vaginal introitus) followed by the rectum (i.e., inserting the swab through the anal sphincter) using the same swab or two different swabs. Cervical, perianal, perirectal or perineal specimens are not acceptable, and a [[speculum]] should not be used for sample collection.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
Samples can be taken by healthcare professionals, or by the mother herself with appropriate instruction.
<ref name="Price 2006">{{cite journal|last1=Price D, Shaw E, Howard M, Zazulak J, Waters H, Kaczorowski J.|title=Self-sampling for group B Streptococcus in women 35 to 37 weeks pregnant is accurate and acceptable: a randomized cross-over trial.|journal=J Obstet Gynaecol Can.|date=2006|volume=28|pages=1983-1088|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17169231}}</ref>
<ref name="Hicks 2009">{{cite journal|last1=Hicks P, Diaz-Perez MJ.|title=Patient self-collection of group B streptococcal specimens during pregnancy.|journal=J Am Board Fam Med.|date=2009|volume=22|pages=136-140|url=http://www.jabfm.org/content/22/2/136.full.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Arya 2008">{{cite journal|last1=Arya A, Cryan B, O’Sullivan K, Greene RA, Higgins JR.|title=Self-collected versus health professional-collected genital swabs to identify the prevalence of group B streptococcus: A comparison of patient preference and efficacy|date=2008|volume=139|pages=32-45.|doi=10.1016/j.ejogrb.2007.12.005}}</ref>

[[File:Instructions for the collection of a genital swab for the detection of GBS from CDC.tif|thumb|Instructions for the collection of a genital swab for the detection of GBS]]
Following the recommendations of the CDC these swabs should be placed into a non-nutritive transport medium. When feasible, specimens should be refrigerated and sent to the laboratory as soon as possible.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
Appropriate transport systems are commercially available, and in these transport media GBS can remain viable for several days at room temperature. However, the recovery of GBS declines over one to four days, especially at elevated temperatures, which can lead to false-negative results.
<ref name="Rosa 2005">{{cite journal|last1=Rosa-Fraile M, Camacho-Muñoz E, Rodríguez-Granger J, Liébana-Martos C.|title=Specimen storage in transport medium and detection of group B streptococci by culture.|journal=J Clin Microbiol.|date=2005|volume=43|pages=928-930|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC548104/pdf/1486-04.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

==== '''Culture methods''' ====
Samples (vaginal, rectal or vagino-rectal swabs) should be inoculated into a selective enrichment broth, (Todd Hewitt broth with selective antibiotics, enrichment culture). This involves growing the samples in an enriched medium to improve the viability of the GBS and simultaneously impairing the growth of other naturally occurring bacteria.
After incubation (18-24h, 35-37ºC), the enrichment broth is subcultured to blood agar plates and GBS-like colonies are identified by the CAMP test or using latex agglutination with GBS antisera.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name=Carey>{{cite web|last1=Carey RB|title=Group B Streptococci: Chains & Changes New Guidelines for the Prevention of Early-Onset GBS|url=http://www.scacm.org/free/2010SpringMeetingPresentations/Carey%20GBS%20guidelines.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
In the UK this is the method described by the [[Health Protection Agency]] (UK Standards for Microbiology Investigations. Detection of Carriage of Group B Streptococci).
<ref name="UK Stand 2015">{{cite web|last1=Microbiology Services Public Health England|title=UK Standards for Microbiology Investigations Detection of Carriage of Group B Streptococci|url=https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/438182/B_58i3.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

After incubation, the enrichment broth can also be subcultured to granada agar where GBS grows as pink-red colonies
<ref name="Rosa-Fraile 1999" />
<ref name=Carey />
<ref name="gragar1">{{cite journal |pmid=10405415 |year=1999 |last1=Gil |first1=EG |last2=Rodríguez |first2=MC |last3=Bartolomé |first3=R |last4=Berjano |first4=B |last5=Cabero |first5=L |last6=Andreu |first6=A |title=Evaluation of the Granada agar plate for detection of vaginal and rectal group B streptococci in pregnant women |volume=37|pages=2648–2651|journal=Journal of clinical microbiology| url= http://jcm.asm.org/content/37/8/2648.full.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="gragar2">{{cite journal|title=Modified Granada Agar Medium for the detection of group B streptococcus carriage in pregnant women |year=2001 |last1=Claeys |first1=G. |last2=Verschraegen |first2=G. |last3=Temmerman |first3=M. |journal=Clinical Microbiology and Infection |volume=7|pages=22–24 |url=http://www.clinicalmicrobiologyandinfection.com/article/S1198-743X(14)63728-9/pdf}}</ref>
or to chromogenic agars, where GBS grows as coloured colonies.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

Today in the UK, the detection of GBS colonization using the enrichment broth technique is not offered from most laboratories serving the NHS. However, the implementation of this test seems to be a viable option. At present, culture for GBS (using enriched culture medium) at 35–37 weeks to define an at-risk group of women appears to be the most cost-effective strategy currently available.
<ref name=pmid17848402/>
<ref name="Kaambwa 2010"/>

The [[charitable organization]] [[Group B Strep Support]] have published a list of hospitals in the UK that offers the detection of GBS using the enrichment broth culture method (Enrichment culture medium, ECM).
<ref name="Where can I get the ECM test?">{{cite web|last1=Where can I get the ECM test?|title=ECM Testing|url=http://gbss.org.uk/who-we-are/testing-for-gbs/ecm-test-where-how/|website=Group B Strep Support|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
This test is also available privately from around £35 per test for a home-testing pack, and it is offered by private clinics: "Where can I get the ECM test?"
<ref name="Where can I get the ECM test?" />
The test is also available privately, for a UK-wide postal service.
<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.medisave.co.uk/group-b-streptococcus-screening-test-p-7896.html?gclid=CP7Z276TwbICFQfMtAod0mUAGQ|title=Group B Streptococcus Screening Test|work=Medisave UK Ltd|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
<ref name="The Doctors Lab">{{cite web|title=Testing for Group B Streptococcus|url=http://www.tdlpathology.com/test-information/new-tests/testing-for-group-b-streptococcus|website=The Doctors Laboratory|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

It is also possible to inoculate directly the vaginal and rectal swabs or the vagino-rectal swab in a plate of an appropriate culture medium for GBS (blood agar, granada medium or chromogenic media). However, this method (bypassing the selective enrichment broth step) can lead to some false negative results, and this approach should be taken only in addition to, and not instead of, inoculation into selective broth.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

==== '''Point of care testing (POCT). PCR intrapartum testing''' ====
No current cultured based test is both accurate enough and fast enough to be recommended for detecting GBS once labour starts. Plating of swab samples requires time for the bacteria to growth, meaning that this is unsuitable as an intrapartum [[point-of-care test]].

Alternative methods to detect GBS in clinical samples (as vagino-rectal swabs) rapidly have been developed, such are the methods based in nucleic acid amplification, [[nucleic acid amplification tests]] (NAAT), like [[polymerase chain reaction]] (PCR) tests, and DNA [[hybridization probe]]s.
These tests can also be used to detect GBS directly from broth media, after the enrichment step, avoiding the subculture of the incubated enrichment broth to an appropriate agar plate.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Buchan 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Buchan BW, Faron ML, Fuller D, Davis TE, Mayne D, Ledeboer NA.|title=Multicenter Clinical Evaluation of the Xpert GBS LB Assay for Detection of Group B Streptococcus in Prenatal Screening Specimens|journal=J Clin Microbiol.|date=2015|volume=53|pages=443-448|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4298547/pdf/zjm443.pdf}}</ref>

Testing women for GBS colonization using vaginal or rectal swabs at 35–37 weeks of gestation and culturing them in enriched media is not as rapid as a PCR test in labour that would check whether the pregnant woman is carrying GBS at delivery. And PCR tests, allow starting IAP on admission to the labour ward in those women in whom it is not known if they are GBS carriers or not.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
PCR testing for GBS carriage could, in the future, be sufficiently accurate to guide IAP. However, the PCR technology to detect GBS must be improved and simplified to make the method cost-effective and fully useful as [[point of care testing]] (POCT) to be carried out in the labour ward (bedside testing), and these tests still cannot replace antenatal culture for the accurate detection of GBS carriers.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />
<ref name="Daniels 2009">{{cite journal|last1=Daniels J, Gray J, Pattison H, Roberts T, Edwards E, Milner P, Spicer L, King E,
 Hills RK, Gray R, Buckley L, Magill L,
 Elliman N, Kaambwa B, Bryan S, Howard R, Thompson P, Khan KS.|title=Rapid testing for group B streptococcus during labour: a test accuracy study with evaluation of acceptability and cost-effectiveness.|journal=Health Technol Assess|date=2009|volume=13|url=http://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0020/64640/FullReport-hta13420.pdf}}</ref>

=== '''<big>Missed opportunities for GBS early onset disease prevention</big>'''===
The important factors for successful prevention of GBS-EOD using IAP and the universal screening approach are:
i) To reach most pregnant women for antenatal screens;
ii) Proper sample collection;
iii) Using an appropriate procedure for detecting GBS; and
iv) Administering a correct IAP to GBS carriers.

Several studies have found that most cases of GBS-EOD occur in term infants born to mothers who screened negative for GBS colonization and in preterm infants born to mothers who were not screened.
Though some false negative results observed in the GBS screening tests can be due to the test limitations and to the acquisition of GBS between the time of screening and delivery, these data show that improvement in specimen collection and processing methods for detecting GBS are still necessary in some settings.
False negative screening test, along with failure to receive IAP in women delivering preterm with unknown GBS colonization status, and the administration of inappropriate IAP agents to penicillin-allergic women account for most missed opportunity for prevention of cases of GBS-EOD.

GBS-EOD infections presented in infants whose mothers had been screened as GBS culture-negative are particularly worrying, and may be caused by incorrect sample collection, by delay in processing the samples, by incorrect laboratory techniques, by recent antibiotic use, or by GBS colonization after the screening was carried out.
<ref name="Gimenez 2015"/>
<ref name="Melin 2011">{{cite journal|last1=Melin P.|title=Neonatal group B streptococcal disease: from pathogenesis to preventive strategies|journal=Clin Microbiol Infect.|date=2011|volume=17|pages=1294-1303|url=http://www.clinicalmicrobiologyandinfection.com/article/S1198-743X(14)61207-6/pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Berardi 2010">{{cite journal|last1=Berardi A, Lugli L, Baronciani D, Rossi C, Ciccia M, Creti R, Gambini L, Mariani S, Papa I, Tridapalli E, Vagnarelli F, Ferrari F; GBS Prevention Working Group of Emilia-Romagna.|title=Group B Streptococcus early-onset disease in Emilia-romagna: review after introduction of a screening-based approach|journal=Pediatr Infect Dis J.|date=2010|volume=29|pages=115-121| url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19915512}}</ref>
<ref name="Schrag & Verani 2013">{{cite journal|last1=Schrag SJ, Verani JR.|title=Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis for the prevention of perinatal group B streptococcal disease: Experience in the United States and implications for a potential group B streptococcal vaccine|journal=Vaccine.|date=2013|volume=31S|pages=D20-26|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24785612}}</ref>
<ref name="Pulver 2009">{{cite journal|last1=Pulver LS, Hopfenbeck MM, Young PC, Stoddard GJ, Korgenski K, Daly J, Byington CL.|title=Continued early onset group B streptococcal infections in the era of intrapartum prophylaxis.|journal=J Perinatol.|date=2009|volume=29|pages=0-25|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Pulver+LS%2C+Hopfenbeck+MM%2C+Young+PC}}</ref>

=== '''<big>Epidemiology</big>''' ===
In 2000–2001 the reported overall incidence of neonatal GBS infection in the UK was 0.72 per 1,000 live births, 0.47 per 1,000 for GBS-EOD and 0.25 per 1,000 for GBS-LOD. Very marked variations were observed, the incidence in Scotland was 0.42 per 1,000 whilst in Northern Ireland it was 0.9 per 1,000 live births.
<ref name="Heath 2004">{{cite journal|last1=Heath PT, Balfour G, Weisner AM, Efstratiou A, Lamagni TL, Tighe H, O'Connell LA, Cafferkey M, Verlander NQ, Nicoll A, McCartney AC; PHLS Group B Streptococcus Working Group.|title=Group B streptococcal disease in UK and Irish infants younger than 90 days.|journal=Lancet.|date=2004|volume=363|pages=292-294 |url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Heath+PT%2C+Balfour+G%2C+Weisner+AM%2C }}</ref>
<ref name="Doare 2013">{{cite journal|last1=Doare K, Heath PT|title=An overview of global GBS epidemiology.|journal=Vaccine.|date=2013|volume=31 Suppl 4|pages=D7-12|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23973349}}</ref>

Nevertheless, it has been suggested that it may be a serious underestimate of the real incidence of GBS infection in newborns. A plausible explanation of this is that a considerable number of infants with probable GBS-EOD had negative cultures as a result of a previous maternal antibiotic treatment that inhibits the growth of GBS in blood and cerebrospinal fluid cultures, but does not mask clinical symptoms.
<ref name="Brigtsen 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Brigtsen A.K. Jacobsen A.F. Dedi L. Melby K.K. Fugelseth D. Whitelaw A.|title=Maternal colonization with Group B Streptococcus Is associated with an increased rate of infants transferred to the neonatal intensive care unit.|journal=Neonatology.|date=2015|volume=108|pages=157-163|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26182960}}</ref>
<ref name="Carbonell 2008">{{cite journal|last1=Carbonell-Estrany X, Figueras-Aloy J, Salcedo-Abizanda S, de la Rosa-Fraile M, Castrillo Study Group.|title=Probable early-onset group B streptococcal neonatal sepsis: a serious clinical condition related to intrauterine infection.|journal=Archives of Disease in Childhood. Fetal Neonatal Edition.|date=2008|volume=93|pages=F85-89|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17704105}}</ref>

Data collected prospectively for neonates who required a septic screen in the first 72 hrs of life in the UK, indicated a combined rate of definite and probable GBS-EOD infection of 3.6 per 1,000 live births.
<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(03)13553-2 |title=Estimated early-onset group B streptococcal neonatal disease |year=2003 |last1=Luck |first1=Suzanne |last2=Torny |first2=Michael |last3=d'Agapeyeff |first3=Katrina |last4=Pitt |first4=Alison |last5=Heath |first5=Paul |last6=Breathnach |first6=Aoadhan |last7=Russell |first7=Alison Bedford |journal=The Lancet |volume=361 |issue=9373 |pages=1953–1954}}</ref>
Another study on the epidemiology of Invasive GBS infections in England and Wales, reported a rise in the incidence of GBS-EOD between 2000 and 2010 from 0.28 to 0.41 per 1,000 live births. Rates of GBS-LOD also increased between 1991 and 2010 from 0.11 to 0.29 per 1,000 live births in England and Wales.
<ref name="Lamagni 2013">{{cite journal|last1=Lamagni TL, Keshishian C, Efstratiou A, Guy R, Henderson KL, Broughton K, Sheridan E.|title=Emerging Trends in the Epidemiology of Invasive Group B Streptococcal Disease in England and Wales, 1991–2010|journal=Clin Infect Dis.|date=2013|volume=57|pages=682-688.|url=http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/57/5/682.long}}</ref>

In the US, it has also been reported that the incidence of GBS-EOD decreased from 0.47 per 1,000 live births in 1999-2001 to 0.34 per 1,000 live births in 2003-2005.
<ref name="Phares 2008" />
And the CDC reported an incidence of GBS-EOD of 0.25 per 1,000 live births in 2010. In contrast the incidence of GBS-LOD has remained unchanged at 0.26 per 1,000 live births in the US.
<ref name="Baker 2013 Vacc">{{cite journal|last1=Baker CJ.|title=The spectrum of perinatal group B streptococcal disease.|journal=Vaccine|date=2013|volume=31s|pages=D3-6|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=The+spectrum+of+perinatal+group+B+streptococcal+disease}}</ref>
[[File:Incidence GBS-EOD in Spain-Castrillo group.tif|thumb|Falling incidence of GBS-EOD in Spain (Castrillo Group of Hospitals)]]
In Spain, the incidence of GBS vertical sepsis declined by 73.6%, from 1.25/1,000 live births in 1996 to 0.33/1,000 in 2008.
<ref name="Lopez Sastre 2009">{{cite journal|last1=Lopez Sastre J, Fernandez Colomer B, Coto Cotallo Gil D, Members of “Grupo de Hospitales Castrillo”|title=Neonatal Sepsis of Vertical Transmision. An epidemiological study from the “Grupo de Hospitales Castrillo”|journal=Early Human Developpment|date=2009|volume=85|pages=S100|doi=10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2009.08.049}}</ref>
In the Barcelona area between 2004 and 2010, the incidence of GBS-EOD was 0.29 ‰ living newborns, with no significant differences along the years. The mortality rate was 8.16%.
<ref name="Gimenez 2015"/>
<ref name="Andreu 2003">{{cite journal|last1=Andreu A, Sanfeliu I, Viñas L, Barranco M, Bosch J, Dopico E, Guardia C, Juncosa T, Lite J, Matas L, Sánchez F, Sierr M; Grupo de Microbiólogos pare el Esduio de las Infecciones de Transmissión Vertical, Societat Catalana de Malalties Infeccioses i Microbiologia Clínica|first1=Article in spanish.|title=Declive de la incidencia de la sepsis perinatal por estreptococo del grupo B (Barcelona 1994-2001). Relación con las políticas profilácticas Decreasing incidence of perinatal group B streptococcal disease (Barcelona 1994-2002). Relation with hospital prevention policies|journal=Enferm Infecc Microbiol Clin.|date=2003|volume=21|pages=174-179|url=http://apps.elsevier.es/watermark/ctl_servlet?_f=10&pident_articulo=13045447&pident_usuario=0&pcontactid=&pident_revista=28&ty=28&accion=L&origen=zonadelectura&web=www.elsevier.es&lan=es&fichero=28v21n04a13045447pdf001.pdf}}</ref>

In France, since 2001, it has also been reported a rapid decrease of incidence of the neonatal GBS infections after widespread use of IAP, from 0.7 to 0.2 per 1,000 births between 1997 and 2006.
<ref>{{cite journal|title=Improving perinatal Group B streptococcus screening with process indicators |year=2011 |last1=Albouy-Llaty |first1=Marion |last2=Nadeau |first2=Cédric |last3=Descombes |first3=Emmanuelle |last4=Pierre |first4=Fabrice |last5=Migeot |first5=Virginie |journal=Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice|volume=18|url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Albouy-Llaty%2C+Marion%3B+Nadeau%2C+C%C3%A9dric}}</ref>

Recently (since 2012) the incidence of neonatal GBS infection has been estimated as 0.53 per 1,000 births in the European region, 0.67 in America and 0.15 in Australasia. Countries reporting no use of IAP had a 2.2-fold higher incidence of GBS-EOD compared with those reporting any use of IAP.
<ref name="Edmond 2012" />
<ref name="Doare 2013"/>

The following are estimates of the chances that a baby will be infected with a GBS neonatal infection if no preventative measures are taken and no other risk factors are present:
<ref name="Benitz 1999">{{cite journal|last1=Benitz WE, Gould JB, Druzin ML.|title=Risk factors for early-onset group B streptococcal sepsis: estimation of odds ratios by critical literature review.|journal=Pediatrics|date=1999|volume=103|pages=e77|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10353974}}</ref>

* 1 in 1,000 where the woman is not a known GBS carrier
* 1 in 400 where the woman carries GBS during the pregnancy
* 1 in 400 where the woman carries GBS during the pregnancy
* 1 in 300 where the woman carries GBS at delivery
* 1 in 300 where the woman carries GBS at delivery
* 1 in 100 where the woman had a previous baby infected with GBS
* 1 in 100 where the woman had a previous baby infected with GBS


If a woman who carries GBS is given IAP during labour the baby’s risk is reduced significantly:
<small>(*This is a broadly accepted estimate of the number of GBS infections in newborn babies that would occur if no preventative intravenous antibiotics in labour are given and this estimate has been used throughout this document. However, recent UK research<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(03)13553-2 |title=Estimated early-onset group B streptococcal neonatal disease |year=2003 |last1=Luck |first1=Suzanne |last2=Torny |first2=Michael |last3=d'Agapeyeff |first3=Katrina |last4=Pitt |first4=Alison |last5=Heath |first5=Paul |last6=Breathnach |first6=Aoadhan |last7=Russell |first7=Alison Bedford |journal=The Lancet |volume=361 |issue=9373 |pages=1953–1954}}</ref> has suggested this may be a serious underestimate of the incidence of GBS infection in newborns, which could be as high as 3.6 per 1,000.)</small>

If a woman who carries GBS is given antibiotics during labour the baby’s risk is reduced significantly:
* 1 in 8,000 where the mother carries GBS during pregnancy;
* 1 in 8,000 where the mother carries GBS during pregnancy;
* 1 in 6,000 where the mother carries GBS at delivery; and
* 1 in 6,000 where the mother carries GBS at delivery; and
* 1 in 2,200 where the mother has previously had a baby infected with GBS.
* 1 in 2,200 where the mother has previously had a baby infected with GBS.


==Guidelines==
=== '''<big>Guidelines</big>''' ===
==== '''UK'''====
===== '''Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists (RCOG)''' =====
The RCOG issued their Green Top Guideline No 36 "Prevention of early onset neonatal Group B streptococcal disease" in November 2003.
<ref name="RCOG 2003">{{cite web|last1=Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists|title=Prevention of early-onset neonatal group B streptococcal (GBS) disease. Guideline No.36. 2003|url=http://www.bapm.org/publications/documents/guidelines/gbs.pdf|website=Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologis|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
In this guideline it is clearly stated that:


''Routine bacteriological screening of all pregnant women for antenatal GBS carriage is not recommended'', and that
===Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists===
RCOG issued their Green Top Guideline No 36 "Prevention of early onset neonatal Group B streptococcal disease" in November 2003.<ref name="Hicks2009" /> This document was reviewed in July 2012, but there were no substantial changes made, the most notable being the clarification of procedure when a woman carrying GBS has PROM and the clarification that oral antibiotics are not recommended in labour against GBS infection in the baby. The review also dealt with a common misconception regarding vaginal cleansing, stating that there is no evidence it reduces GBS infection in the baby. The next review is due in 2015. The guidelines is flawed, however, as it uses minimum incidence figures from a surveillance study undertaken in 2000-1<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(03)15389-5 |title=Group B streptococcal disease in UK and Irish infants younger than 90 days |year=2004 |last1=Heath |first1=Paul T |last2=Balfour |first2=Gail |last3=Weisner |first3=Abbie M |last4=Efstratiou |first4=Androulla |last5=Lamagni |first5=Theresa L |last6=Tighe |first6=Helen |last7=O'Connell |first7=Liam AF |last8=Cafferkey |first8=Mary |last9=Verlander |first9=Neville Q |last10=Nicoll |first10=Angus |last11=McCartney |first11=A Christine |journal=The Lancet |volume=363 |issue=9405 |pages=292–294|display-authors=8 }}</ref> and therefore not only underestimate the true incidence of GBS infection, but also underestimate the risks to babies from GBS infection. GBS infection in babies has increased in England, Wales and Northern Ireland since 2003 (when the guideline was introduced) – voluntarily reported cases from the CDR/HPA show 0.48 cases per 1000 live births in 2003, which increased to 0.64 per 1000 in 2009<ref name="Pyogenic and non-pyogenic streptococcal bacteraemia">{{cite journal |title=Pyogenic and non-pyogenic streptococcal bacteraemia, England, Wales and Northern Ireland: 2010 |url=http://www.hpa.org.uk/webc/HPAwebFile/HPAweb_C/1317131482001 |journal=Health Protection Report |volume=5 |issue=46 |pages=1–19 |year=2011}}</ref> In 2007, RCOG published the findings of their audit to evaluate practice in UK obstetric units against their recommendations.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-first=David |editor1-last=Cromwell |editor2-first=Tracey |editor2-last=Joffe |editor3-first=Jan |editor3-last=van der Meulen |editor4-first=Charnjit |editor4-last=Dhillon |editor5-first=Rhona |editor5-last=Hughes |editor6-first=Deirdre |editor6-last=Murphy |year=2007 |title=The Prevention of Early-onset Neonatal Group B Streptococcal Disease in UK Obstetric Units |publisher=Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists |isbn=978-1-904752-37-0 |url=http://www.rcog.org.uk/files/rcog-corp/uploaded-files/neonatal_audit_full_250507.pdf}}{{page needed|date=April 2012}}</ref> The audit started out by comparing international guidelines for early onset GBS disease: highlighting the fact that, in contrast to the UK and New Zealand guidelines, most of the other countries surveyed recommended identifying women for intravenous antibiotics in labour by offering sensitive tests to all pregnant women. The audit reviewed hospitals’ protocols against GBS infection in newborn babies – of the 161 UK units, which submitted their protocol, four units did not even have a protocol for GBS, of those that did, 35% did not mention the 2003 RCOG guideline, and only a minority of units had protocols that were entirely consistent with the guideline. Further UK research published in 2010<ref name="Pyogenic and non-pyogenic streptococcal bacteraemia"/> looked at the opportunities for prevention amongst cases of early onset group B Strep infection in babies following introduction of the RCOG Guideline. They found that, in the 48 cases of GBS during 2004 to 2007 (0.52/1000 live births), only 19% of the mothers in whom risk factors were present were given adequate intravenous antibiotics in labour. The researchers stated that, “if all women with risk factors received prophylaxis, 23 cases (48%) may have been prevented.”{{cite quote|date=April 2012}}


''Vaginal swabs should not be taken during pregnancy unless there is a clinical indication to do so''.
===NICE guidelines===
The UK's [[National Institute for Health and Care Excellence]] (NICE) does not recommend routine testing for GBS, saying, “Pregnant women should not be offered routine antenatal screening for group B
However, it is also stated that:
streptococcus because evidence of its clinical and cost effectiveness remains uncertain”.<ref>{{cite web|title=CG62 Antenatal care: NICE guideline|url=http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG62/NICEGuidance/pdf/English|publisher=NICE}}</ref> However, the evidence of similar screening studies clearly demonstrates the clinical effectiveness of testing pregnant women for GBS and offering intravenous antibiotics in labour to women whose babies are at increased risk. Countries that introduced such programmes have seen in the incidence of GBS infection fall dramatically. These countries include the USA, Australia, New Zealand, Belgium, France, Spain, and Italy.<ref name="Pyogenic and non-pyogenic streptococcal bacteraemia"/> The issue of cost-effectiveness is less clear-cut, though a study published in September 2007<ref name="Colbourn2007" /><ref name=pmid17848402/> indicated testing low risk women, plus antibiotics being given to high-risk women and those found to carry GBS was more cost-effective than current UK practice. Further research also found screening to be more cost effective than risk factors<ref name=pmid21040389/><ref name="Kaambwa2010" />
The guideline was reviewed in March 2008 though no significant changes were made,<ref>NICE. Antenatal Care: Routine care for the healthy and pregnant woman. National Institute for Clinical Excellence Guidelines , 32.
2010.</ref> and in the May 2011 review - no changes at all were made to the section regarding GBS. The next review will be after 2014.


''Intrapartum Antibiotic Prophylaxis should be offered if GBS is detected on a vaginal swab in the current pregnancy''.
===National Screening Committee===
The National Screening Committee’s current policy position on group B Strep is that screening should not be offered.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.screening.nhs.uk/groupbstreptococcus |title=Policies |publisher=Screening.nhs.uk |accessdate=18 October 2011}}</ref> This policy was reviewed in November 2008 but no significant changes were made. The policy was reviewed again in 2012, and despite receiving 212 responses, of which 93% advocated screening,<ref>http://www.screening.nhs.uk/policydb_download.php?doc=246</ref> the NSC decided to not recommend antenatal screening.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.screening.nhs.uk/groupbstreptococcus|title=Group B Streptococcus|work=screening.nhs.uk}}</ref> This decision was strongly criticised by the charity Group B Strep Support as ignoring both the wishes of the public and the rising incidence rates of group B Strep infection.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://us4.campaign-archive2.com/?u=6599c26deb03ac68f3446cccc&id=4816108c26|title=Leading baby charity devastated by decision not to introduce life saving screening of pregnant women|work=campaign-archive2.com}}</ref>


Nevertheless, this guidelines uses minimum incidence figures from a study undertaken in 2000-2001,
In May 2006, the UK National Screening Committee launched their GBS online learning package. This learning package was developed to raise awareness of GBS amongst health care professionals. Developed by the Women’s Health Specialist Library (part of the National Library for Health), the learning package is based upon the current UK guidelines published by the Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists. It is divided into three sections – antenatal, delivery and postnatal. Within each section, there is the option to access an introduction to GBS, different clinical scenarios, a series of quiz questions to test knowledge and a FAQs section.
<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(03)15389-5 |title=Group B streptococcal disease in UK and Irish infants younger than 90 days |year=2004 |last1=Heath |first1=Paul T |last2=Balfour |first2=Gail |last3=Weisner |first3=Abbie M |last4=Efstratiou |first4=Androulla |last5=Lamagni |first5=Theresa L |last6=Tighe |first6=Helen |last7=O'Connell |first7=Liam AF |last8=Cafferkey |first8=Mary |last9=Verlander |first9=Neville Q |last10=Nicoll |first10=Angus |last11=McCartney |first11=A Christine |journal=The Lancet |volume=363 |issue=9405 |pages=292–294|display-authors=8 }}</ref>
and therefore it could not only underestimate the true incidence of GBS infection, but it could also have underestimated the risks to babies from GBS infection.
GBS infection in babies has increased in England, Wales and Northern Ireland since 2003 (when the guideline was introduced). Voluntarily reported cases from the CDR/HPA (Communicable Disease Report/Health Protection Agency) show 0.48 cases per 1,000 live births in 2003, which increased to 0.64 per 1,000 in 2009.
<ref name="Health Protection Report 2011">{{cite web|last1=Health Protection Report Vol. 5 No. 46 – 18 November 2011 ·|title=Pyogenic and non-pyogenic streptococcal bacteraemia, England, Wales and Northern Ireland: 2010|url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20140714084352/http://www.hpa.org.uk/webc/HPAwebFile/HPAweb_C/1317131482001|website=Health Protection Report|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>


In 2007, the RCOG published the findings of their audit to evaluate practice in the UK obstetric units against their recommendations.
===Other ===
<ref name="Cromwell 2007">{{cite book|last1=Cromwell D, Joffe T, van der Meulen J, Dhillon C, Hughes R, Murphy D.|title=The Prevention of Early-onset Neonatal Group B Streptococcal Disease in UK Obstetric Units|date=2007|publisher=Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine|isbn=978-1-904752-37-0|url=https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/research--audit/neonatal_audit_full_250507.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
The United States uses the most effective strategy: all pregnant women are screened for Group B Strep<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=15768620 |year=2005 |last1=Apgar |first1=BS |last2=Greenberg |first2=G |last3=Yen |first3=G |title=Prevention of group B streptococcal disease in the newborn |volume=71 |issue=5 |pages=903–10 |journal=American family physician}}</ref> and prophylactic antibiotics are given to all women testing positive and to those who deliver before 37 weeks of pregnancy plus to women with unknown GBS test result and other recognised risk factors. Because of this strategy, the US has seen a major reduction in babies born with early-onset infection<ref name=pmid19214159>{{cite journal |pmid=19214159 |year=2009 |author1=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) |title=Trends in perinatal group B streptococcal disease - United States, 2000-2006 |volume=58 |issue=5 |pages=109–12 |journal=MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report}}</ref> of over 80% since preventative strategies were introduced. Countries that routinely screen women for GBS carriage late in pregnancy, and give intrapartum antibiotics to those who test positive include USA, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Canada, Australia, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Kenya, and Argentina. Published papers report reductions of 70–86% in early onset group B Strep infections in France,<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1111/j.1365-2753.2011.01658.x |title=Improving perinatal Group B streptococcus screening with process indicators |year=2011 |last1=Albouy-Llaty |first1=Marion |last2=Nadeau |first2=Cédric |last3=Descombes |first3=Emmanuelle |last4=Pierre |first4=Fabrice |last5=Migeot |first5=Virginie |journal=Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice |pmid=21414110 |pages=no |volume=18 |issue=4}}</ref> Spain<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Andreu |first1=Antonia |last2=Sanfeliu |first2=Isabel |last3=Viñas |first3=Lluis |last4=Barranco |first4=Margarita |last5=Bosch |first5=Jordi |last6=Dopico |first6=Eva |last7=Guardia |first7=Celia |last8=Juncosa |first8=Teresa |last9=Lite |first9=Josep |last10=Matas |first10=Lurdes |last11=Sánchez |first11=Ferrán |last12=Sierr |first12=Montse |last13=Grupo De Microbiólogos Pare El Esduio De Las Infecciones De Transmissión Vertical |first13=Societat Catalana de Malalties Infeccioses i Microbiologia Clínica |title=Declive de la incidencia de la sepsis perinatal por estreptococo del grupo B (Barcelona 1994-2001). Relación con las políticas profilácticas |trans_title=Decreasing incidence of perinatal group B streptococcal disease (Barcelona 1994-2002). Relation with hospital prevention policies |language=Spanish |journal=Enfermedades Infecciosas y Microbiología Clínica |pmid=12681128 |year=2003 |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=174–9 |doi=10.1157/13045447|display-authors=8 }}</ref> and Australia<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1136/adc.2004.066134 |title=Early onset neonatal meningitis in Australia and New Zealand, 1992-2002 |year=2005 |last1=May |first1=M |journal=Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition |volume=90 |issue=4 |pages=F324–7 |pmid=15878934 |last2=Daley |first2=AJ |last3=Donath |first3=S |last4=Isaacs |first4=D |author5=Australasian Study Group for Neonatal Infections |pmc=1721922}}</ref> whilst, as expected, the rate of late onset GBS infection in babies has remained constant.
The audit started out by comparing international guidelines for prevention of GBS-EOD: highlighting the fact that, in contrast to the UK and New Zealand guidelines, most of the other countries surveyed recommended identifying women for IAP by offering sensitive tests to all pregnant women. The audit reviewed hospitals’ protocols against GBS infection in newborns. And of the 161 UK units, which submitted their protocol, four units did not even have a protocol for GBS, of those that did, 35% did not mention the 2003 RCOG guideline, and only a minority of units had protocols that were entirely consistent with the guideline.


Further UK research published in 2010 looked at the opportunities for prevention of GBS-EOD following the introduction of the RCOG Guideline. They found that, in the 48 cases of GBS during 2004 to 2007 (0.52/1,000 live births), only 19% of the mothers in whom risk factors were present were given adequate IAP. And the researchers stated that:
Part of the neonatal care in Mexico includes undergoing a screening with culture of a cervicovaginal swab during the third trimester of pregnancy, though chemoprophylaxis based on positive results remains below 50%<ref name=pmid19214159/><ref>{{cite journal |title=Quimioprofilaxis para evitar la colonización materna por estreptococo grupo B. Consecuencias de no adoptar la recomendación internacional |trans_title=Maternal chemoprophylaxis against group B Streptococcus colonization. The consequences of not adopting the international recommendation |language=Spanish |journal=Salud Pública De México |doi=10.1590/S0036-36342008000200009 |pmid=18372996 |year=2008 |last1=Reyna-Figueroa |first1=Jesús |last2=Ortiz-Ibarra |first2=Federico Javier |last3=Pérez-Antonio |first3=Beatriz |last4=Navarro-Godínez |first4=Sujey |last5=Casanova-Román |first5=Gerardo |last6=García-Carrillo |first6=Laura Erika |volume=50 |issue=2 |pages=155–61}}</ref>
“''if all women with risk factors received prophylaxis, 23 cases (48%) may have been prevented.''”
<ref name="Vergnano 2010" />


The 2003 RCOG guideline was reviewed in July 2012,
==Other animals==
<ref name="RCOG 2012" />
Group B strep has been found in many mammals such as camels, dogs, cats, crocodiles, seals and dolphins.
but there were no substantial changes made, the most notable being the clarification of procedure when a woman carrying GBS has PROM and the clarification that oral antibiotics are not recommended in labour against GBS infection in the baby.


The review also dealt with a common misconception regarding vaginal cleansing, stating that there is no evidence showing that this procedure can reduce GBS infection in the baby.
===Cattle===
New evidence and guidance in this field were reviewed by the RCOG in 2014 and it was decided that revision of the guideline would be deferred to a later date. And in the mean time the version available on the website will remain valid until replaced.
Group B Strep was recognised as a pathogen in cattle before the Second World War. Its significance as human pathogene was not discovered before the 1950s. In cattle it causes mastitis, an infection of the udder. It can either give acute, febrile disease or sub-acute, more chronic disease. Both lead to diminishing milk production (hence its name: agalactiae meaning "no milk"). Outbreaks in herds are common. This is of major significance for the dairy industry and programs to reduce the impact of Group B Strep have been enforced in many countries over at least the last 30–40 years.<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=9220132 |year=1997 |last1=Keefe |first1=GP |title=Streptococcus agalactiae mastitis: A review |volume=38 |issue=7 |pages=429–37 |pmc=1576741 |journal=The Canadian veterinary journal}}</ref>
<ref name="RCOG 2015" />


====='''NICE guidelines'''=====
===Fish===
The UK's [[National Institute for Health and Care Excellence]] (NICE) does not recommend routine testing for GBS, stating:
Fisheries and wildlife officers from Queensland, Australia, have been investigating the deaths of more than 50 grouper fish, between 2008 and 2010, that have washed up dead on beaches in the north of the state. The fish had been infected with Group B Streptococcus.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Paull |first1=Nathan |date=5 April 2010 |title=Mystery groper deaths |url=http://www.townsvillebulletin.com.au/article/2010/04/05/127795_news.html |work=Townsville Bulletin}}</ref>
“''Pregnant women should not be offered routine antenatal screening for group B streptococcus because evidence of its clinical and cost effectiveness remains uncertain''”.
<ref name="NICE 2008">{{cite web|last1=Screening for infections.1.8.9 Group B streptococcus|title=Antenatal care for uncomplicated pregnancies.NICE guidelines [CG62] : March 2008|url=https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/CG62/chapter/1-Guidance#screening-for-infections|website=NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>


Nevertheless the NICE Guideline "Neonatal infection: antibiotics for prevention and treatment" state that:
==References==

"''Intrapartum Antibiotic Prophylaxis should be offered if group B streptococcal colonisation, bacteriuria or infection are detected in the current pregnancy''".
<ref name="NICE 2012">{{cite web|last1=NICE guidelines [CG149] August 2012|title=Neonatal infection: antibiotics for prevention and treatment. 1.3 Intrapartum antibiotics|url=https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg149/chapter/1-Guidance#intrapartum-antibiotics-2|website=NICE National Institute for Health and Care excellence|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

====='''National Screening Committee'''=====
The [[UK National Screening Committee]]’s current policy position on GBS is that:

"''screening should not be offered to all pregnant women''".
<ref name=NSC>{{cite web|last1=UK National Screening Committee (UK NSC)|title=The UK NSC recommendation on Group B Streptococcus screening in pregnancy. 2012.|url=http://legacy.screening.nhs.uk/groupbstreptococcus|website=Current UK NSC recommendations|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

This policy was reviewed in 2012, and despite receiving 212 responses, of which 93% advocated screening,
<ref>http://www.screening.nhs.uk/policydb_download.php?doc=246</ref>
the NSC decided to not recommend antenatal screening.

This decision was strongly criticized by the charity [[Group B Strep Support]] as ignoring both the wishes of the public and the rising incidence rates of GBS infection in the UK.
<ref>{{cite web|url=http://us4.campaign-archive2.com/?u=6599c26deb03ac68f3446cccc&id=4816108c26|title=Leading baby charity devastated by decision not to introduce life saving screening of pregnant women.2012|work=campaign-archive2.com|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

In May 2006, the UK National Screening Committee launched their GBS online learning package. This learning package was developed to raise awareness of GBS amongst health care professionals. Developed by the Women’s Health Specialist Library (part of the National Library for Health), the learning package is based upon the current UK guidelines published by the RCOG. And it is divided into three sections – antenatal, delivery and postnatal. Within each section, there is the option to access an introduction to GBS, different clinical scenarios, a series of quiz questions to test knowledge and a FAQs section.
<ref name="Screening e-Learning modules">{{cite web|last1=NHS|title=Screening e-Learning modules|url=http://cpd.screening.nhs.uk/elearning}}</ref>

===='''Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC''' ====

Recommendations for IAP to prevent perinatal GBS disease were issued in 1996 by the CDC. In these guidelines it was recommended the use of one of two prevention methods, either a risk-based approach or a culture-based screening approach.
<ref name="CDC 1996" />

The CDC issued updated guidelines in 2002. These CDC` 2002 guidelines recommended the universal culture-based screening of all pregnant women at 35–37 weeks’ gestation to optimize the identification of women who must receive IAP. CDC also recommended that women with unknown GBS colonization status at the time of delivery be managed according to the presence of intrapartum risk factors. Because of this strategy, the US has seen a major reduction in the incidence GBS-EOD.
<ref name="CDC 2002">{{cite journal|last1=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention- CDC|first1=MMWR|title=Prevention of Perinatal Group B Streptococcal Disease Revised Guidelines from CDC. 2002|journal=Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.|date=2002|volume=51-RR11|pages=1-22|url=http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5111a1.htm|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

The CDC issued updated guidelines again in 2010. However, the foundations of prevention in the CDC`s 2010 guidelines remain unchanged.
<ref name="Verani 2010" />

-The following were the main additions in the 2010 guidelines:

-Expanded options for laboratory detection of GBS, including use of pigmented media and PCR assays.

-A revised colony count threshold for laboratories to report GBS in the urine of pregnant women.

-Revised algorithms for GBS screening and use of IAP for women with threatened preterm delivery, including one algorithm for preterm labor and one for preterm premature rupture of membranes.

-Recommendations for IAP agents are presented in an algorithm format in an effort to promote use of the most appropriate antibiotic for penicillin-allergic women.

-A minor change has been made to penicillin dosing to facilitate implementation in facilities with different pre-packaged penicillin products.

-The neonatal management algorithm’s scope was expanded to apply to all newborns.

-Management recommendations that depend upon clinical appearance of the neonate and other risk factors such as maternal chorioamnionitis, adequacy of IAP if indicated for the mother, gestational age and duration of membrane rupture.

-Changes were made to the algorithm to reduce unnecessary evaluations in well appearing newborns at relatively low risk for GBS-EOD.
<ref name="CDC Overview 2014">{{cite web|last1=CDC|title=Overview of 2010 Guidelines. 2014|url=http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/guidelines/new-differences.html|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

===='''Other guidelines''' ====
National guidelines in most developed countries advocate the use of universal screening of pregnant women late in pregnancy to detect GBS carriage and use of IAP in all colonized mothers. e.g. Canada,
<ref name="Guide Canada 2013">{{cite journal|last1=Money D, Allen VM.|title=The Prevention of Early-Onset Neonatal Group B Streptococcal Disease|journal=J Obstet Gynaecol Can.|date=2013|volume=35|pages=939-951|url=http://sogc.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/October2013-CPG298-ENG-Online_Final.pdf}}</ref>
Spain,
<ref name="Alos 2013">{{cite journal|last1=Alós Cortés JI, Andreu Domingo A, Arribas Mir L, Cabero Roura L, de Cueto López M, López Sastre J, Melchor Marcos JC, Puertas Prieto A, de la Rosa Fraile M, Salcedo Abizanda S, Sánchez Luna M, Sanchez Pérez MJ, Torrejon Cardoso R.|title=Prevención de la infección perinatal por estreptococo del grupo B. Recomendaciones espanolas.Actualización2012.Documento de consenso SEIMC/SEGO/SEN/SEQ/SEMFYC.|journal=Enferm Infecc Microbiol Clin.|date=2013|volume=31|pages=159-172|url=http://apps.elsevier.es/watermark/ctl_servlet?_f=10&pident_articulo=90193768&pident_usuario=0&pcontactid=&pident_revista=28&ty=160&accion=L&origen=zonadelectura&web=www.elsevier.es&lan=es&fichero=28v31n03a90193768pdf001.pdf}}</ref>
Switzerland,
<ref name="Surbek 2007">{{cite journal|last1=Surbek D.Kommission für Qualitätssicherung der SGGG/gynécologie suisse|title=Prophylaxe der frühen Neugeborenensepsis durch Streptokokken der Gruppe B-Prevention of early neonatal sepsis by GBS|journal=Gynäkol Geburtshilfliche Rundsch|date=2007|volume=47|pages=103-104|url=http://www.karger.com/Article/Pdf/100342}}</ref>
Germany,
<ref name="GE 2012">{{cite web|last1=Leitlinien der Gesellschaft für Neonatologie und Pädiatrische Intensivmedizin (GNPI) Deutschen Gesellschaft für Gynäkologie und Geburtshilfe, Deutschen Gesellschaft für Pädiatrische Infektiologie (DGPI), und Deutsche Gesellschaft für Perinatale Medizin (DGPM)|title=Prophylaxe der Neugeborensepsis - frühe Form - durch Streptokokken der Gruppe B - Prevention of neonatal sepsis - early form - by GBS|url=http://www.gnpi.de/leitlinien/aktuell/024-020l_S2k_Neugeborenensepsis_Streptokokken.pdf|accessdate=30 November 2015}}</ref>
Poland,
<ref name="Pol 2008">{{cite journal|last1=Kotarski J, Heczko PB, Lauterbach R, Niemiec T, Leszczyńska- Gorzelak B|title=Rekomendacje polskiego towarzystwa ginekologicznego dotyczące wykrywania nosicielstwa paciorkowców grupy B (GBS) u kobiet w ciąży i zapobiegania zakażeniom u noworodków--Recommendations Polish Gynecological Society for the detection of carriers of GBS in pregnant women and prevent infections in newborns.|journal=Ginekol Pol|date=2008|volume=79|pages=221-223}}</ref>
Czech Republic,
<ref name="Czech 2013">{{cite journal|last1=A. Měchurová, V. Unzeitig, J. Mašata, P. Švihovec|title=Diagnostika a léčba streptokoků skupiny B v těhotenství a za porodu – doporučený postup---Diagnosis and treatment of GBS in pregnancy and during birth - Recommendations|journal=Klin Mikrobiol Infekc Lek.|date=2013|volume=12|pages=11-14|url=http://www.gynultrazvuk.cz/data/clanky/6/dokumenty/p-2013-diagnostika-a-lecba-streptokoku-skupiny-b-v-tehotenstvi.pdf}}</ref>
France,
<ref name="France 2001">{{cite web|last1=Agence Nationale d’Accreditation et d’Evaluation en Santé (2001)|title=Prévention anténatale du risque infectieux bactérien néonatal précoce.2001.|url=http://www.has-sante.fr/portail/upload/docs/application/pdf/prevention_antenatale_du_risque_infectieux_bacterien_-_rec.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
and Belgium.
<ref name="Belgium 2003">{{cite web|last1=Belgian Health Council|title=Prevention of perinatal group B streptococcal infections. Guidelines. 2003|url=https://orbi.ulg.ac.be/bitstream/2268/8652/1/GBS_CSH%20english%202003.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>

In contrast, risk factor-based guidelines were issued in the Netherlands,
<ref name="Nederland 2008">{{cite web|last1=Nederlandse Vereniging voor Obstetrie en Gynaecologie (NVOG) (2008)|title=Preventie van neonatale groep-B-streptokokkenziekte (GBS- Ziekte)|url=http://www.nvog-documenten.nl/index.php?pagina=/richtlijn/item/pagina.php&id=26959&richtlijn_id=827|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
New Zealand,
<ref name="New Zealand 2014">{{cite web|last1=The New Zealand College of Midwives. The Paediatric Society of New Zealand The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (New Zealand Committee). Australasian Society of Infectious Diseases – New Zealand Sub-committee|title=The prevention of early-onset neonatal group b streptococcus infection.Consensus guideline 2014.|url=http://nationalwomenshealth.adhb.govt.nz/Portals/0/Documents/Policies/Group%20B%20Strep%20Neonatal%20Disease_.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
Argentina,
<ref name=Argentina>{{cite web|last1=Ministerio de Salud de la Nación. Dirección Nacional de Salud Materno Infantil. Argentina|first1=In Spanish|title=Recomendaciones para la prevención, diagnóstico y tratamiento de la infección neonatal precoz por Estreptococo β Hemolítico del Grupo B (EGB). Recommendations for prevention, diagnosis and treatment of early neonatal infection by Streptococcus β hemolytic group B (GBS)|url=http://www.ms.gba.gov.ar/sitios/tocoginecologia/files/2014/09/Consenso-Estreptococo-B-Hemol%C3%ADtico.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
and Queensland.
<ref name=Queensland>{{cite web|last1=Queensland Maternity and Neonatal Clinical Guideline|title=Early onset Group B streptococcal disease|url=https://www.health.qld.gov.au/qcg/documents/g_gbs5-0.pdf|accessdate=11 January 2016}}</ref>
Nevertheless, the [[Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists]] (RANZCOG) does not recommend clearly one of both prevention strategies -either the risk-based
or the screening based approach- to identify pregnant women for IAP, and allow practitioners to choose according jurisdictional guidelines.
<ref name=RANZCOG->{{cite web|last1=Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists.|title=Routine Antenatal Care-Maternal Group B Streptococcus (GBS) in Pregnancy: Screening and Management (C-Obs 19)-Review: July 2015|accessdate=11 January 2016|url=https://www.ranzcog.edu.au/college-statements-guidelines.html|website=RANZCOG}}</ref>

=='''GBS INFECTION IN ADULTS'''==
GBS is also an important infectious agent able to cause invasive infections in adults. Serious life-threatening invasive GBS infections are increasingly recognized in the elderly and in individuals compromised by underlying diseases such as diabetes, [[cirrhosis]] and cancer. GBS infections in adults include urinary tract infection, skin and soft-tissue infection ([[skin and skin structure infection]]) bacteremia without focus, osteomyelitis, meningitis and [[endocarditis]].
<ref name="Edwards 2010" />
GBS infection in adults can be serious, and mortality is higher among adults than among neonates.
In general, penicillin is the antibiotic of choice for treatment of GBS infections. Erythromycin or clindamycin should not be employed for treatment in penicillin-allergic patients unless susceptibility of the infecting GBS isolate to these agents is documented. [[Gentamicin]] plus penicillin (for [[antibiotic synergy]]) in patients with life threatening GBS infections may be used.
<ref name="Farley 2001">{{cite journal|last1=Farley MM.|title=Group B Streptococcal Disease in Nonpregnant Adults"|journal=Clinical Infectious Diseases.|date=2001|volume=33|pages=556–561|url=http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/33/4/556.full.pdf}}</ref><ref name="Edwards 2005">{{cite journal|last1=Edwards MS,. Baker CJ.|title=Group B streptococcal infections in elderly adults|journal=Clin Infect Dis.|date=2005|volume=41|pages=839-847|url=http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/41/6/839.full.pdf}}</ref>
<ref name="Skoff 2009">{{cite journal|last1=Skoff TH, Farley MM, Petit S, Craig AS, Schaffner W, Gershman K, Harrison LH, Lynfield R, Mohle-Boetani J, Zansky S, Albanese BA, Stefonek K, Zell ER, Jackson D, Thompson T, Schrag SJ.|title=Increasing Burden of Invasive Group B Streptococcal Disease in Nonpregnant Adults, 1990–2007.|journal=Clin Infect Dis.|date=2009|volume=49|pages=85-92|url=http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/49/1/85.full.pdf}}</ref>

== '''VACCINATION''' ==

Though the introduction of national guidelines to screen pregnant women for GBS carriage and the use of IAP has significantly reduced the burden of GBS-EOD disease, it has had no effect on preventing neither GBS-LOD in infants nor GBS infections in adults.
<ref name=Jordan2008>{{cite journal|last1=Jordan HT, Farley MM, Craig A, Mohle-Boetani J, Harrison LH, Petit S, Lynfield R, Thomas A, Zansky S, Gershman K, Albanese BA, Schaffner W, Schrag SJ; Active Bacterial Core Surveillance (ABCs)/Emerging Infections Program Network, CDC|title=Revisiting the need for vaccine prevention of late-onset neonatal group B streptococcal disease: a multistate, population-based analysis|journal=Pediatr Infect Dis J.|date=2008|volume=27|pages=1057–1064|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Jordan+HT%2C+Farley+MM%2C+Craig+A%2C+Mohle-Boetani+J }}</ref>

Because of that, if an effective vaccine against GBS were available it would be an effective means of controlling not only GBS disease in infants but also GBS infections in adults.
The capsular polysaccharide of GBS which is an important GBS virulence factor is also an excellent candidate for the development of an effective vaccine.

As early as 1976,
<ref name="Baker 1976" />
it was demonstrated that low levels of maternal antibodies against the capsular polysaccharide of GBS correlated with susceptibility to GBS-EOD and GBS-LOD. Maternal specific antibodies, transferred from the mother to the newborn, were able to confer protection to babies against GBS infection.
<ref name=Baker2014>{{cite journal|last1=Baker CJ, Carey VJ, Rench MA, Edwards MS, Hillier SH, Kasper DL, Platt R.|title=Maternal Antibody at Delivery Protects Neonates From Early Onset Group B Streptococcal Disease|journal=J Infect Dis.|date=2014|volume=209|pages=781–788|url=http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/209/5/781.full.pdf}}</ref>
[[Vaccination]] is considered an ideal solution to prevent not only GBS-EOD and GBS-LOD but also GBS infections in adults at risk. Nevertheless, though research and [[clinical trials]] for the development of an effective vaccine to prevent GBS infections are underway, no vaccine is currently available in 2015.
At present, the licensing of GBS vaccines is difficult because of the challenge in conducting efficacy clinical trials in humans due to the low incidence of GBS neonatal diseases.
<ref name="Rodriguez-Granger 2012" />
<ref name=Edwards-Gonik2013>{{cite journal|last1=Edwards MS, Gonik B|title=Preventing the broad spectrum of perinatal morbidity and mortality throughgh group B streptococcal vaccination|journal=Vaccine|date=2013|volume=31S|pages=D66-71|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Preventing+the+broad+spectrum+of+perinatal+morbidity+and+mortality+through+group+B+streptococcal+vaccination}}</ref>
<ref name="Nuccitelli 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Nuccitelli A, Rinaudo CD, Maione D.|title=Group B Streptococcus vaccine: state of the art.|journal=Ther Adv Vaccines.|date=2015|volume=3|pages=76-90|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4530403/pdf/10.1177_2051013615579869.pdf}}</ref>

=='''GBS INFECTION IN ANIMALS'''==
GBS has been found in many mammals and other animals such as camels, dogs, cats, seals, dolphins, and crocodiles.
<ref name=Delannoy2013>{{cite journal|last1=Delannoy CMJ, Crumlish M, Fontaine MC, Pollock J, Foster G, Dagleish MP, Turnbull JF, Zadoks RN.|title=Human Streptococcus agalactiae strains in aquatic mammal and fish|journal=BMC Microbiology|date=2013|volume=13|pages=41|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3585737/pdf/1471-2180-13-41.pdf}}</ref>

==='''<big>Cattle</big>'''===
In cattle, GBS causes mastitis, an infection of the udder. It can produce an acute febrile disease or a sub-acute, more chronic disease. Both lead to diminishing milk production (hence its name: agalactiae meaning "no milk"). Mastitis associated with GBS can have an important effect on the quantity and quality of milk produced, and are also associated with elevated somatic cell count and total bacteria count in the milk. Outbreaks in herds are common. And as this is of major significance for the dairy industry, programs to reduce the impact of GBS have been enforced in many countries.
<ref>{{cite journal |year=1997 |last1=Keefe |first1=GP |title=Streptococcus agalactiae mastitis: A review |volume=38|pages=429–37|journal=The Canadian veterinary journal|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1576741/pdf/canvetj00092-0031.pdf }}</ref>

==='''<big>Fish</big>'''===
GBS it is also an important pathogen in a diversity of fish species, leading to serious economic losses in many species of fish worldwide.
GBS causes severe epidemics in fish farmers causing septicemia and external and internal hemorrhages. GBS infection has been reported from wild and captive fish and has been involved in [[epizootics]] in many countries.
<ref name=Evans2009>{{cite journal|last1=Evans JJ, Klesius PH, Pasnik DJ, Bohnsack JF.|title=Human Streptococcus agalactiae isolate in Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus)|journal=Emerg Infect Dis|date=2009|volume=15|pages=774–776|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2687030/pdf/08-0222_finalD.pdf}}</ref><ref name=LiuG2013>{{cite journal|last1=Liu G, Zhang W, Lu C|title=Comparative genomics analysis of Streptococcus|date=2013|volume=14|pages=775|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3831827/pdf/1471-2164-14-775.pdf}}</ref>

Vaccines to protect fish against GBS infections are under development.
<ref name="Li 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Li LP, Wang R, Liang WW1, Huang T1, Huang Y2, Luo FG, Lei AY, Chen M, Gan X|title=Development of live attenuated Streptococcus agalactiae vaccine for tilapia via continuous passage in vitro.|journal=Fish Shellfish Immunol.|date=2015|volume=45|pages=955-963.|doi=10.1016/j.fsi.2015.06.014}}</ref>

=='''References'''==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.groupbstrep.org Group B Strep Association]
*[http://www.groupbstrep.org Group B Strep Association] UK

*[http://www.gbss.org.uk Group B Strep Support, UK charity] ([[Group B Strep Support]])
*[http://www.ontariomidwives.ca/care/birth/gbs] Ontario Midwives
*[http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/guidelines/guidelines.html 2010 Guidelines for the Prevention of Perinatal Group B Streptococcal Disease] of the [[Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]] (CDC) - (earlier guidelines of 2002: [http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5111a1.htm Prevention of Perinatal Group B Streptococcal Disease] 16 August 2002 MMWR 2000;49:228–232 - [http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/guidelines/new-differences.html summary of main differences between 2002 and 2010 guidelines])

*[http://www.strepb.ca/home.htm The Canadian Strep B Foundation]
*[http://www.meningitisuk.org Meningitis UK]
*[http://www.groupbstrepinternational.org Group B Strep International]
*[http://www.groupbstrepinternational.org Group B Strep International]

*[http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/index.html CDC—Group B Strep (GBS)]

*[http://www.groupbstrep.org Group B Strep Association US]

*[http://www.ogbs.nl/] Netherlands, Dutch Foundation GBS.


{{Gram-positive bacterial diseases}}
{{Gram-positive bacterial diseases}}
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{{Diseases of maternal transmission}}
{{Diseases of maternal transmission}}


[[Category:Health issues in pregnancy]]
[[:Category:Health issues in pregnancy]]
[[Category:Streptococcal infections]]
[[:Category:Streptococcal infections]]

Revision as of 11:34, 15 January 2016

Group B streptococcal infection
SpecialtyPediatrics Edit this on Wikidata

Group B streptococcus infection is the infection caused by the bacteria Streptococcus agalactiae (S. agalactiae) (also known as Group B streptococcus or GBS). Group B streptococcal infection can cause serious illness and sometimes death, especially in newborns, the elderly, and people with compromised immune systems. GBS was recognized as a pathogen in cattle by Edmond Nocard and Mollereau in the late 1880s, but its significance as a human pathogen was not discovered before the 1938 when Fry [1] described three fatal cases of puerperal infections caused by GBS. In the early 1960s GBS was recognized as a main cause of neonatal sepsis. [2]

In general, GBS is a harmless commensal bacterium being part of the human microbiota colonizing the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract of up to 30% of healthy human adults (asymptomatic carriers). [3] [4] [5]

S. agalactiae is also a common veterinary pathogen, because it can cause bovine mastitis (inflammation of the udder) in dairy cows. The species name "agalactiae" meaning "no milk", alludes to this. [6] S. agalactiae is a gram-positive coccus (spherical bacteria) with a tendency to form chains (streptococcus), beta-haemolytic, catalase-negative, and facultative anaerobe. [7] [8] [9]

Streptococcus agalactiae- Gram stain
β-haemolytic colonies of Streptococcus agalactiae, blood agar 18h at 36°C

S. agalactiae is the species designation for streptococci belonging to the group B of the Rebecca Lancefield classification of streptococci (Lancefield grouping). GBS is surrounded by a bacterial capsule composed of polysaccharides (exopolysaccharides). GBS are subclassified into ten serotypes (Ia, Ib, II–IX) depending on the immunologic reactivity of their polysaccharide capsule. [5] [7] [10] As other virulent bacteria, GBS harbours an important number of virulence factors, [11] the most important are the capsular polysaccharide (rich in sialic acid), and a pore-forming toxin, β-haemolysin. [12] The GBS capsule is probably the key virulence factor because it helps GBS escape from host defence mechanisms interfering with phagocytic killing of GBS by human phagocytes. [5] [12] The GBS β-haemolysin is considered identical to the GBS pigment. [13] [14] [15] [16]

IDENTIFICATION OF GBS IN THE LABORATORY

As mentioned, Streptococcus agalactiae is a gram-positive coccus with a tendency to form chains, beta-haemolytic, catalase-negative, and facultative anaerobe. GBS grows readily on blood agar plates as microbial colonies surrounded by a narrow zone of β-haemolysis. GBS is characterized by the presence in the cell wall of the group B antigen of the Lancefield classification (Lancefield grouping) that can be detected directly in intact bacteria using latex agglutination tests. [9] The CAMP test is also another important test for identification of GBS. The CAMP factor acts synergistically with the staphylococcal β-haemolysin inducing enhanced haemolysis of sheep or bovine erythrocytes. [9]

Positive CAMP test indicated by the formation of an arrowhead where Streptococcus agalactiae meets the Staphylococcus aureus (white middle streak)

GBS is also able to hydrolyse hippurate and this test can also be used to identify presumptively GBS. Haemolytic GBS strains produce an orange-brick-red non-isoprenoid polyene pigment (ornythinrhamnododecaene) (granadaene) when cultivated on granada medium that allows its straightforward identification. [17]

Red colonies of S.agalactiae in granada agar. Vagino-rectal culture 18h incubation 36°C anaerobiosis

Identification of GBS could also be carried out easily using modern methods for identifying bacteria as MALDI-TOF (Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry). [18]

GBS COLONIZATION AND INFECTION

Almost always, GBS is an innocuous commensal bacterium that colonizes the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract of humans. In different studies, GBS vaginal colonization rate ranges from 4 to 36%, with most studies reporting rates over 20%. These variations in the reported prevalence of asymptomatic (presenting no symptoms of disease) colonization could be related to the different detection methods used, and differences in populations studied. [19] [20] [21]

Though GBS is an asymptomatic colonizer of the gastrointestinal human tract in up to 30% of otherwise healthy adults, including pregnant women, [5] [19] this opportunistic harmless bacterium can, in some circumstances, cause severe invasive infections. [4]

GBS AND PREGNANCY

Though GBS colonization is asymptomatic and, in general, in healthy women during pregnancy, does not cause problems it can sometimes cause serious illness for the mother and the baby during gestation and after delivery. GBS infections in the mother can cause chorioamnionitis (intra-amniotic infection or severe infection of the placental tissues) infrequently, and postpartum infections (after birth). GBS urinary tract infections (UTI) may induce labour and cause premature delivery (preterm birth). [5]

Newborns

In the western world, GBS (in the absence of effective prevention measures) is the main cause of bacterial infections in newborns, such as septicemia, pneumonia, and meningitis, which can lead to death or long-term sequelae. [5] [22]

GBS infections in newborns are separated into two clinical types, early-onset disease (GBS-EOD) and late-onset disease (GBS-LOD). GBS-EOD manifests from 0 to 7 living days in the newborn, most of the cases of EOD being apparent within 24 h from birth. GBS-LOD starts between seven and 90 days after birth. [5] [21]

The most common clinical syndromes of GBS-EOD are septicemia without apparent location, pneumonia, and less frequently meningitis. Bacteremia without a focus occurs in 80-85%, pneumonia in 10% to 15% and meningitis in 5% to 10% of neonates suffering from GBS-EOD. The initial clinical findings are respiratory signs in more than 80% of cases. Neonates with meningitis often have an initial clinical presentation identical to presentation in those without meningeal affectation. An exam of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is often necessary to rule out meningitis. [5] [23] [24]

Colonization with GBS during labour is the primary risk factor for development of GBS-EOD. GBS-EOD is acquired vertically (vertical transmission), through exposure of the fetus or the baby to GBS from the vagina of a colonized woman, either in utero (because of ascending infection) or during birth, after rupture of membranes. Infants can also be infected during passage through the birth canal, nevertheless, newborns that acquire GBS through this route can only become colonized, and these colonized infants usually do not develop GBS-EOD.

Roughly, 50% of newborns to GBS colonized mothers are also GBS colonized and (without prevention measures) 1% to 2% of these newborns will develop GBS-EOD. [25] In the past, the incidence of GBS-EOD ranged from 0.7 to 3.7 per thousand live births in the US, [5] and from 0.2 to 3.25 per thousand in Europe. [20] In 2008, after widespread use of antenatal screening and intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of United States (CDC) reported an incidence of 0.28 cases of GBS-EOD per thousand live births in the US. [26]

Though maternal GBS colonization is the key determinant for GBS-EOD, other factors also increase the risk. These factors comprise: [5] [21]

--Onset of labour before 37 weeks of gestation (premature birth).

--Prolonged rupture of membranes (longer duration of membrane rupture) (≥18 h before delivery).

--Intrapartum (during childbirth) fever (>38 °C, >100.4 °F).

--Amniotic infections (chorioamnionitis).

--Young maternal age.

Nevertheless, most babies who develop GBS-EOD are born to GBS colonized mothers without any of these risk factors. [21] Heavy GBS vaginal colonization is also associated with a higher risk for GBS-EOD.

Women who had one of these risk factors but who are not GBS colonized at labour are at low risk for GBS-EOD compared with women who were colonized prenatally but had none of the aforementioned risk factors. [25]

Presence of low levels of anticapsular antibodies against GBS in the mother are also of great importance for the development of GBS-EOD. [27] [28] Because of that, a previous sibling with GBS-EOD is also an important risk factor for development of the infection in subsequent deliveries, probably reflecting the lack of protective antibodies in the mother. [21]

Overall, the case fatality rates from GBS-EOD have declined, from 50% observed in studies from the 1970s to between 2% and 10% in recent years, mainly as a consequence of improvements in therapy and management. Fatal neonatal infections by GBS are more frequent among premature infants. [5] [21] [29]

GBS-LOD affects infants from 7 days to 3 months of age and has a lower case fatality rate (1%-6%) than GBS-EOD. Clinical syndromes of GBS-EOD are bacteremia without a focus (65%), meningitis (25%), cellulitis, osteoarthritis, and pneumonia. Prematurity has been reported to be the main risk factor. Each week of decreasing gestation increases the risk by a factor of 1.34 for developing GBS-LOD. [30]

GBS-LOD is not acquired through vertical transmission during delivery, it can be acquired later from the mother from breast milk or from environmental and community sources. GBS-LOD commonly shows nonspecific signs, and diagnosis should be made obtaining blood cultures in febrile newborns. Hearing loss and mental impairment can be a long-term consequence of GBS meningitis. [5] [22]

Prevention of neonatal infection. Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP)

Currently, the only reliable way to prevent GBS-EOD is intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP). That is to say administration of antibiotics during delivery. It has been proved that intravenous penicillin or ampicillin given at the onset of labour and then again every four hours until delivery to GBS colonized women are very effective at preventing vertical transmission of GBS from mother to baby and GBS-EOD (Penicillin G, 5 million units IV initial dose, then 2.5–3.0 million units every 4 hrs until delivery or Ampicillin, 2 g IV initial dose, then 1 g IV every 4 hrs until delivery). [5] [21]

It has been indicated that penicillin-allergic women without a history of anaphylaxis (angioedema, respiratory distress or urticaria) following administration of a penicillin or a cephalosporin (low risk of anaphylaxis) could receive cefazolin (2g IV initial dose, then 1 g IV every 8 hrs until delivery) instead of penicillin or ampicillin. [21]

Clindamycin (900 mg IV every 8 hrs until delivery), and vancomycin (1 g IV every 12 hrs until delivery) are used to prevent GBS-EOD in infants born to penicillin-allergic mothers. [21]

Erythromycin is not recommended for IAP under any circumstances today. [21]

Antibiotic susceptibility testing (AST) of GBS isolates is crucial for appropriate antibiotic selection for IAP in penicillin-allergic women, because resistance to clindamycin, the most common agent used (in penicillin-allergic women), is increasing among GBS isolates. Appropriate methodologies for testing are important, because resistance to clyndamicin (antimicrobial resistance) can occur in some GBS strains that appear susceptible (antibiotic sensitivity) in certain susceptibility tests. [21]

It has been shown that if appropriate IAP in GBS colonized women starts at least 2 hours before delivery the risk of neonatal infection is also somehow reduced. [31] [32] [33]

True penicillin-allergy is rare with an estimated frequency of anaphylaxis of 1 to 5 episodes per 10,000 cases of penicillin therapy. [34] Penicillin administered to a woman with no history of β-lactam allergy has a risk of anaphylaxis of 4/10,000 to 4/100,000. Maternal anaphylaxis associated with GBS IAP occurs, but any morbidity associated with anaphylaxis is offset greatly by reductions in the incidence of GBS-EOD. [21]

Home births are becoming increasingly popular in the UK. Recommendations for preventing GBS infections in newborns are the same for home births as for hospital births. Around 25% of women having home births probably carry GBS in their vagina at delivery without knowing. And it could be difficult to follow correctly the recommendations of IAP and to deal with the risk of a severe allergic reaction to the antibiotics outside of a hospital setting. [35]

IAP have been considered to be associated with the emergence of resistant bacterial strains and with an increase in the incidence of early-onset infections caused by other pathogens, mainly Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli. Nevertheless, most studies have not found an increased rate of non-GBS early-onset sepsis related to the widespread use of IAP. [21] [36] [37] [38]

Other strategies to prevent GBS-EOD have been studied, and chlorhexidine intrapartum vaginal cleansing has been proposed to help preventing GBS-EOD, nevertheless there is no evidence of the effectiveness of this approach. [21] [39] [40]

Identifying candidates to receive intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis

There are two ways to select female candidates to IAP: the culture-based screening approach and the risk-based approach. [41] The culture-based screening approach identifies candidates using lower vaginal and rectal cultures obtained between 35 and 37 weeks of gestation, and IAP is administered to all GBS colonized women. The risk-based strategy identifies candidates to receive IAP by the aforementioned risk factors known to increase the probability of GBS-EOD without considering if the mother is or is not a GBS carrier. [5] [21] [42]

IAP is also recommended, when selecting candidates for IAP, for women with intrapartum risk factors if their GBS carrier status is not known at the time of delivery, and for women with GBS bacteriuria during their pregnancy, and for women who have had an infant with GBS-EOD previously. The risk-based approach is, in general, less effective than the culture-based approach, [43] because in most cases GBS-EOD develops among newborns who have been born to mothers without risk factors. [21] [25] [44]

IAP is not required for women undergoing planned caesarean section in the absence of labour and with intact membranes, irrespective of carriage of GBS. [21] [45]

Routine screening of pregnant women is performed in most developed countries such as the United States, France, Spain, Belgium, Canada, and Australia. And data have shown falling incidences of GBS-EOD following the introduction of screening-based measures to prevent GBS-EOD. [20] [44] [46]

The risk-based strategy is advocated, among other counties, in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Argentina. [20]

In the UK, the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) does not recommend bacteriological screening of pregnant women for antenatal GBS carriage. [45] [47] Instead, women are treated according to their risk in labour. IAP is given to women where GBS has been found from their urine or vaginal/rectal swabs taken during the pregnancy, and to women who have previously had a baby with GBS disease. Immediate induction of labour and IAP should be offered to all women with prelabour rupture of membranes at 37 weeks of gestation or more, to women whose membranes are ruptured more than 18 hours and to those who have fever in labour. Women who are pyrexial in labour should be offered broad-spectrum antibiotics including an antibiotic appropriate for preventing EOD-GBS. [45] [48]

The issue of cost-effectiveness of both strategies for identifying candidates for IAP is less clear-cut. And some studies have indicated that testing low risk women, plus IAP administered to high-risk women and those found to carry GBS is more cost-effective than the advocated current UK practice. [49] Other evaluations have also found the culture-based approach to be more cost-effective than the risk-based approach for the prevention of GBS-EOD. [50] [51]

It has been reported that IAP will not prevent all cases of GBS-EOD. IAP efficacy is estimated at 80%. The risk-based prevention strategy does not prevent about 33% of cases with no risk factors. [52]

It has also been proposed that testing pregnant women to detect GBS carriers, and giving IAP to those carrying GBS and to high-risk women, is significantly more cost-effective than the use of the risk-factor approach. One research paper calculated an expected net benefit to the UK Government of such an approach of around £37million a year, compared with the current RCOG approach. [49] [50]

In the UK, it has also been suggested that:

"For women known to carry GBS where it is not expected that the intravenous antibiotics can be given for at least 4 hours before delivery, an intramuscular injection of 4.8 MU (2.9 g) of Penicillin G at about 35 weeks of pregnancy may be useful in addition to intravenous antibiotics given from the onset of labour or membranes rupturing until delivery to try to eradicate GBS colonisation until after delivery". [53]

However, this recommendation IS NOT supported by the present guidelines. [21] [45]

It has also been pointed out that up to 90% of cases of GBS-EOD would be preventable if IAP were offered to all GBS carriers identified by universal screening late in pregnancy, plus to the mothers in higher risk situations. [54]

Where insufficient intravenous antibiotics are given before delivery, the baby may be given antibiotics immediately after birth, although evidence is inconclusive as to whether this practice is effective or not. [21] [55] [56] [57]

Falling incidence of EOD & LOD GBS disease in US-CDC

Screening for GBS colonization in pregnancy

Approximately 10%–30% of women are colonized with GBS during pregnancy. Nevertheless, during pregnancy colonization can be temporary, intermittent, or continual. [21]

Because the GBS colonization status of women can change during pregnancy, only cultures carried out ≤5 weeks before delivery predict quite accurately the GBS carrier status at delivery. In contrast, if the prenatal culture is carried out more than 5 weeks before delivery it is unreliable for accurately predicting the GBS carrier status at delivery. And because of that, testing for GBS colonization in pregnant women is recommended by the CDC guidelines at 35–37 weeks of gestation. [21] [58]

The clinical samples recommended for culture of GBS are swabs collected from lower vagina and rectum through the external anal sphincter. The sample should be collected swabbing the lower vagina (vaginal introitus) followed by the rectum (i.e., inserting the swab through the anal sphincter) using the same swab or two different swabs. Cervical, perianal, perirectal or perineal specimens are not acceptable, and a speculum should not be used for sample collection. [21] Samples can be taken by healthcare professionals, or by the mother herself with appropriate instruction. [59] [60] [61]

Instructions for the collection of a genital swab for the detection of GBS

Following the recommendations of the CDC these swabs should be placed into a non-nutritive transport medium. When feasible, specimens should be refrigerated and sent to the laboratory as soon as possible. [21] Appropriate transport systems are commercially available, and in these transport media GBS can remain viable for several days at room temperature. However, the recovery of GBS declines over one to four days, especially at elevated temperatures, which can lead to false-negative results. [62] [21]

Culture methods

Samples (vaginal, rectal or vagino-rectal swabs) should be inoculated into a selective enrichment broth, (Todd Hewitt broth with selective antibiotics, enrichment culture). This involves growing the samples in an enriched medium to improve the viability of the GBS and simultaneously impairing the growth of other naturally occurring bacteria. After incubation (18-24h, 35-37ºC), the enrichment broth is subcultured to blood agar plates and GBS-like colonies are identified by the CAMP test or using latex agglutination with GBS antisera. [21] [63] In the UK this is the method described by the Health Protection Agency (UK Standards for Microbiology Investigations. Detection of Carriage of Group B Streptococci). [64]

After incubation, the enrichment broth can also be subcultured to granada agar where GBS grows as pink-red colonies [17] [63] [65] [66] or to chromogenic agars, where GBS grows as coloured colonies. [21]

Today in the UK, the detection of GBS colonization using the enrichment broth technique is not offered from most laboratories serving the NHS. However, the implementation of this test seems to be a viable option. At present, culture for GBS (using enriched culture medium) at 35–37 weeks to define an at-risk group of women appears to be the most cost-effective strategy currently available. [50] [51]

The charitable organization Group B Strep Support have published a list of hospitals in the UK that offers the detection of GBS using the enrichment broth culture method (Enrichment culture medium, ECM). [67] This test is also available privately from around £35 per test for a home-testing pack, and it is offered by private clinics: "Where can I get the ECM test?" [67] The test is also available privately, for a UK-wide postal service. [68] [69]

It is also possible to inoculate directly the vaginal and rectal swabs or the vagino-rectal swab in a plate of an appropriate culture medium for GBS (blood agar, granada medium or chromogenic media). However, this method (bypassing the selective enrichment broth step) can lead to some false negative results, and this approach should be taken only in addition to, and not instead of, inoculation into selective broth. [21]

Point of care testing (POCT). PCR intrapartum testing

No current cultured based test is both accurate enough and fast enough to be recommended for detecting GBS once labour starts. Plating of swab samples requires time for the bacteria to growth, meaning that this is unsuitable as an intrapartum point-of-care test.

Alternative methods to detect GBS in clinical samples (as vagino-rectal swabs) rapidly have been developed, such are the methods based in nucleic acid amplification, nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT), like polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests, and DNA hybridization probes. These tests can also be used to detect GBS directly from broth media, after the enrichment step, avoiding the subculture of the incubated enrichment broth to an appropriate agar plate. [21] [70]

Testing women for GBS colonization using vaginal or rectal swabs at 35–37 weeks of gestation and culturing them in enriched media is not as rapid as a PCR test in labour that would check whether the pregnant woman is carrying GBS at delivery. And PCR tests, allow starting IAP on admission to the labour ward in those women in whom it is not known if they are GBS carriers or not. [21] PCR testing for GBS carriage could, in the future, be sufficiently accurate to guide IAP. However, the PCR technology to detect GBS must be improved and simplified to make the method cost-effective and fully useful as point of care testing (POCT) to be carried out in the labour ward (bedside testing), and these tests still cannot replace antenatal culture for the accurate detection of GBS carriers. [21] [71]

Missed opportunities for GBS early onset disease prevention

The important factors for successful prevention of GBS-EOD using IAP and the universal screening approach are: i) To reach most pregnant women for antenatal screens; ii) Proper sample collection; iii) Using an appropriate procedure for detecting GBS; and iv) Administering a correct IAP to GBS carriers.

Several studies have found that most cases of GBS-EOD occur in term infants born to mothers who screened negative for GBS colonization and in preterm infants born to mothers who were not screened. Though some false negative results observed in the GBS screening tests can be due to the test limitations and to the acquisition of GBS between the time of screening and delivery, these data show that improvement in specimen collection and processing methods for detecting GBS are still necessary in some settings. False negative screening test, along with failure to receive IAP in women delivering preterm with unknown GBS colonization status, and the administration of inappropriate IAP agents to penicillin-allergic women account for most missed opportunity for prevention of cases of GBS-EOD.

GBS-EOD infections presented in infants whose mothers had been screened as GBS culture-negative are particularly worrying, and may be caused by incorrect sample collection, by delay in processing the samples, by incorrect laboratory techniques, by recent antibiotic use, or by GBS colonization after the screening was carried out. [44] [72] [73] [74] [75]

Epidemiology

In 2000–2001 the reported overall incidence of neonatal GBS infection in the UK was 0.72 per 1,000 live births, 0.47 per 1,000 for GBS-EOD and 0.25 per 1,000 for GBS-LOD. Very marked variations were observed, the incidence in Scotland was 0.42 per 1,000 whilst in Northern Ireland it was 0.9 per 1,000 live births. [76] [77]

Nevertheless, it has been suggested that it may be a serious underestimate of the real incidence of GBS infection in newborns. A plausible explanation of this is that a considerable number of infants with probable GBS-EOD had negative cultures as a result of a previous maternal antibiotic treatment that inhibits the growth of GBS in blood and cerebrospinal fluid cultures, but does not mask clinical symptoms. [78] [79]

Data collected prospectively for neonates who required a septic screen in the first 72 hrs of life in the UK, indicated a combined rate of definite and probable GBS-EOD infection of 3.6 per 1,000 live births. [80] Another study on the epidemiology of Invasive GBS infections in England and Wales, reported a rise in the incidence of GBS-EOD between 2000 and 2010 from 0.28 to 0.41 per 1,000 live births. Rates of GBS-LOD also increased between 1991 and 2010 from 0.11 to 0.29 per 1,000 live births in England and Wales. [81]

In the US, it has also been reported that the incidence of GBS-EOD decreased from 0.47 per 1,000 live births in 1999-2001 to 0.34 per 1,000 live births in 2003-2005. [46] And the CDC reported an incidence of GBS-EOD of 0.25 per 1,000 live births in 2010. In contrast the incidence of GBS-LOD has remained unchanged at 0.26 per 1,000 live births in the US. [82]

Falling incidence of GBS-EOD in Spain (Castrillo Group of Hospitals)

In Spain, the incidence of GBS vertical sepsis declined by 73.6%, from 1.25/1,000 live births in 1996 to 0.33/1,000 in 2008. [83] In the Barcelona area between 2004 and 2010, the incidence of GBS-EOD was 0.29 ‰ living newborns, with no significant differences along the years. The mortality rate was 8.16%. [44] [84]

In France, since 2001, it has also been reported a rapid decrease of incidence of the neonatal GBS infections after widespread use of IAP, from 0.7 to 0.2 per 1,000 births between 1997 and 2006. [85]

Recently (since 2012) the incidence of neonatal GBS infection has been estimated as 0.53 per 1,000 births in the European region, 0.67 in America and 0.15 in Australasia. Countries reporting no use of IAP had a 2.2-fold higher incidence of GBS-EOD compared with those reporting any use of IAP. [29] [77]

The following are estimates of the chances that a baby will be infected with a GBS neonatal infection if no preventative measures are taken and no other risk factors are present: [86]

  • 1 in 1,000 where the woman is not a known GBS carrier
  • 1 in 400 where the woman carries GBS during the pregnancy
  • 1 in 300 where the woman carries GBS at delivery
  • 1 in 100 where the woman had a previous baby infected with GBS

If a woman who carries GBS is given IAP during labour the baby’s risk is reduced significantly:

  • 1 in 8,000 where the mother carries GBS during pregnancy;
  • 1 in 6,000 where the mother carries GBS at delivery; and
  • 1 in 2,200 where the mother has previously had a baby infected with GBS.

Guidelines

UK

Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists (RCOG)

The RCOG issued their Green Top Guideline No 36 "Prevention of early onset neonatal Group B streptococcal disease" in November 2003. [87] In this guideline it is clearly stated that:

Routine bacteriological screening of all pregnant women for antenatal GBS carriage is not recommended, and that

Vaginal swabs should not be taken during pregnancy unless there is a clinical indication to do so.

However, it is also stated that:

Intrapartum Antibiotic Prophylaxis should be offered if GBS is detected on a vaginal swab in the current pregnancy.

Nevertheless, this guidelines uses minimum incidence figures from a study undertaken in 2000-2001, [88] and therefore it could not only underestimate the true incidence of GBS infection, but it could also have underestimated the risks to babies from GBS infection. GBS infection in babies has increased in England, Wales and Northern Ireland since 2003 (when the guideline was introduced). Voluntarily reported cases from the CDR/HPA (Communicable Disease Report/Health Protection Agency) show 0.48 cases per 1,000 live births in 2003, which increased to 0.64 per 1,000 in 2009. [89]

In 2007, the RCOG published the findings of their audit to evaluate practice in the UK obstetric units against their recommendations. [90] The audit started out by comparing international guidelines for prevention of GBS-EOD: highlighting the fact that, in contrast to the UK and New Zealand guidelines, most of the other countries surveyed recommended identifying women for IAP by offering sensitive tests to all pregnant women. The audit reviewed hospitals’ protocols against GBS infection in newborns. And of the 161 UK units, which submitted their protocol, four units did not even have a protocol for GBS, of those that did, 35% did not mention the 2003 RCOG guideline, and only a minority of units had protocols that were entirely consistent with the guideline.

Further UK research published in 2010 looked at the opportunities for prevention of GBS-EOD following the introduction of the RCOG Guideline. They found that, in the 48 cases of GBS during 2004 to 2007 (0.52/1,000 live births), only 19% of the mothers in whom risk factors were present were given adequate IAP. And the researchers stated that: “if all women with risk factors received prophylaxis, 23 cases (48%) may have been prevented.[52]

The 2003 RCOG guideline was reviewed in July 2012, [45] but there were no substantial changes made, the most notable being the clarification of procedure when a woman carrying GBS has PROM and the clarification that oral antibiotics are not recommended in labour against GBS infection in the baby.

The review also dealt with a common misconception regarding vaginal cleansing, stating that there is no evidence showing that this procedure can reduce GBS infection in the baby. New evidence and guidance in this field were reviewed by the RCOG in 2014 and it was decided that revision of the guideline would be deferred to a later date. And in the mean time the version available on the website will remain valid until replaced. [47]

NICE guidelines

The UK's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) does not recommend routine testing for GBS, stating: “Pregnant women should not be offered routine antenatal screening for group B streptococcus because evidence of its clinical and cost effectiveness remains uncertain”. [91]

Nevertheless the NICE Guideline "Neonatal infection: antibiotics for prevention and treatment" state that:

"Intrapartum Antibiotic Prophylaxis should be offered if group B streptococcal colonisation, bacteriuria or infection are detected in the current pregnancy". [92]

National Screening Committee

The UK National Screening Committee’s current policy position on GBS is that:

"screening should not be offered to all pregnant women". [93]

This policy was reviewed in 2012, and despite receiving 212 responses, of which 93% advocated screening, [94] the NSC decided to not recommend antenatal screening.

This decision was strongly criticized by the charity Group B Strep Support as ignoring both the wishes of the public and the rising incidence rates of GBS infection in the UK. [95]

In May 2006, the UK National Screening Committee launched their GBS online learning package. This learning package was developed to raise awareness of GBS amongst health care professionals. Developed by the Women’s Health Specialist Library (part of the National Library for Health), the learning package is based upon the current UK guidelines published by the RCOG. And it is divided into three sections – antenatal, delivery and postnatal. Within each section, there is the option to access an introduction to GBS, different clinical scenarios, a series of quiz questions to test knowledge and a FAQs section. [96]

Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC

Recommendations for IAP to prevent perinatal GBS disease were issued in 1996 by the CDC. In these guidelines it was recommended the use of one of two prevention methods, either a risk-based approach or a culture-based screening approach. [41]

The CDC issued updated guidelines in 2002. These CDC` 2002 guidelines recommended the universal culture-based screening of all pregnant women at 35–37 weeks’ gestation to optimize the identification of women who must receive IAP. CDC also recommended that women with unknown GBS colonization status at the time of delivery be managed according to the presence of intrapartum risk factors. Because of this strategy, the US has seen a major reduction in the incidence GBS-EOD. [97]

The CDC issued updated guidelines again in 2010. However, the foundations of prevention in the CDC`s 2010 guidelines remain unchanged. [21]

-The following were the main additions in the 2010 guidelines:

-Expanded options for laboratory detection of GBS, including use of pigmented media and PCR assays.

-A revised colony count threshold for laboratories to report GBS in the urine of pregnant women.

-Revised algorithms for GBS screening and use of IAP for women with threatened preterm delivery, including one algorithm for preterm labor and one for preterm premature rupture of membranes.

-Recommendations for IAP agents are presented in an algorithm format in an effort to promote use of the most appropriate antibiotic for penicillin-allergic women.

-A minor change has been made to penicillin dosing to facilitate implementation in facilities with different pre-packaged penicillin products.

-The neonatal management algorithm’s scope was expanded to apply to all newborns.

-Management recommendations that depend upon clinical appearance of the neonate and other risk factors such as maternal chorioamnionitis, adequacy of IAP if indicated for the mother, gestational age and duration of membrane rupture.

-Changes were made to the algorithm to reduce unnecessary evaluations in well appearing newborns at relatively low risk for GBS-EOD. [98]

Other guidelines

National guidelines in most developed countries advocate the use of universal screening of pregnant women late in pregnancy to detect GBS carriage and use of IAP in all colonized mothers. e.g. Canada, [99] Spain, [100] Switzerland, [101] Germany, [102] Poland, [103] Czech Republic, [104] France, [105] and Belgium. [106]

In contrast, risk factor-based guidelines were issued in the Netherlands, [107] New Zealand, [108] Argentina, [109] and Queensland. [110] Nevertheless, the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG) does not recommend clearly one of both prevention strategies -either the risk-based or the screening based approach- to identify pregnant women for IAP, and allow practitioners to choose according jurisdictional guidelines. [111]

GBS INFECTION IN ADULTS

GBS is also an important infectious agent able to cause invasive infections in adults. Serious life-threatening invasive GBS infections are increasingly recognized in the elderly and in individuals compromised by underlying diseases such as diabetes, cirrhosis and cancer. GBS infections in adults include urinary tract infection, skin and soft-tissue infection (skin and skin structure infection) bacteremia without focus, osteomyelitis, meningitis and endocarditis. [4] GBS infection in adults can be serious, and mortality is higher among adults than among neonates. In general, penicillin is the antibiotic of choice for treatment of GBS infections. Erythromycin or clindamycin should not be employed for treatment in penicillin-allergic patients unless susceptibility of the infecting GBS isolate to these agents is documented. Gentamicin plus penicillin (for antibiotic synergy) in patients with life threatening GBS infections may be used. [112][113] [114]

VACCINATION

Though the introduction of national guidelines to screen pregnant women for GBS carriage and the use of IAP has significantly reduced the burden of GBS-EOD disease, it has had no effect on preventing neither GBS-LOD in infants nor GBS infections in adults. [115]

Because of that, if an effective vaccine against GBS were available it would be an effective means of controlling not only GBS disease in infants but also GBS infections in adults. The capsular polysaccharide of GBS which is an important GBS virulence factor is also an excellent candidate for the development of an effective vaccine.

As early as 1976, [27] it was demonstrated that low levels of maternal antibodies against the capsular polysaccharide of GBS correlated with susceptibility to GBS-EOD and GBS-LOD. Maternal specific antibodies, transferred from the mother to the newborn, were able to confer protection to babies against GBS infection. [116] Vaccination is considered an ideal solution to prevent not only GBS-EOD and GBS-LOD but also GBS infections in adults at risk. Nevertheless, though research and clinical trials for the development of an effective vaccine to prevent GBS infections are underway, no vaccine is currently available in 2015. At present, the licensing of GBS vaccines is difficult because of the challenge in conducting efficacy clinical trials in humans due to the low incidence of GBS neonatal diseases. [20] [117] [118]

GBS INFECTION IN ANIMALS

GBS has been found in many mammals and other animals such as camels, dogs, cats, seals, dolphins, and crocodiles. [119]

Cattle

In cattle, GBS causes mastitis, an infection of the udder. It can produce an acute febrile disease or a sub-acute, more chronic disease. Both lead to diminishing milk production (hence its name: agalactiae meaning "no milk"). Mastitis associated with GBS can have an important effect on the quantity and quality of milk produced, and are also associated with elevated somatic cell count and total bacteria count in the milk. Outbreaks in herds are common. And as this is of major significance for the dairy industry, programs to reduce the impact of GBS have been enforced in many countries. [120]

Fish

GBS it is also an important pathogen in a diversity of fish species, leading to serious economic losses in many species of fish worldwide. GBS causes severe epidemics in fish farmers causing septicemia and external and internal hemorrhages. GBS infection has been reported from wild and captive fish and has been involved in epizootics in many countries. [121][122]

Vaccines to protect fish against GBS infections are under development. [123]

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  • [1] Ontario Midwives
  • [2] Netherlands, Dutch Foundation GBS.

Category:Health issues in pregnancy Category:Streptococcal infections