Predicting peripartum infection in laboring patients at high risk in Cameroon, Africa

Gabriella D. Cozzi*, Yuanfan Ye, Rahel Mbah, Doreen M. Mbunwe, Seraphine Pekwarake, Edwan Yui Bunwi, Anthony Fondzeyuf, Mary G. Ngong, Jodie A. Dionne, Lorie M. Harper, Victoria C. Jauk, Waldemar A. Carlo, Gregory Halle-Ekane, Pius M. Tih, Jeff M. Szychowski, Alan T. Tita, Akila Subramaniam

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To develop a predictive model for peripartum infection among high risk laboring patients in Cameroon, Africa. Study design: We conducted a secondary analysis of the Cameroon Antibiotic Prophylaxis Trial (NCT 3248297), a multicenter 3-arm double-blind randomized controlled trial of oral azithromycin ± amoxicillin among term pregnancies with prolonged labor or rupture of membranes in Cameroon 1/2018–5/2020. Patients with chorioamnionitis prior to randomization, study drug contraindications, or planned cesarean were excluded. The outcome of interest was a composite of maternal peripartum infection (chorioamnionitis, endometritis, sepsis by World Health Organization criteria, wound infection/abscess) diagnosed up to 6 weeks postpartum. Potential predictors were compared between patients with and without the composite outcome, and evaluated at a 0.05 alpha level. Statistically significant exposures were analyzed using multivariable regression (to generate adjusted odds ratios and 95 % confidence intervals) with backwards selection to generate a parsimonious model. Receiver operating characteristic curves with associated area under the curve assessed the model's predictive ability. A nomogram based on the final best fit multivariable model was constructed. Results: Of 756 patients in the parent trial, 652 were analyzed: 45 (7 %) had peripartum infection. Those with infection were more likely to be nulliparous, lower education level, higher gestational age, receive antibiotics per hospital protocols, and undergo cesarean. In our best-fit multivariable model, none/primary education (vs university), cesarean birth, and antibiotic receipt per physician discretion (vs for cesarean prophylaxis) were significantly associated with increased infection risk. This model was moderately predictive (AUC = 0.75, 95 % CI 0.67–0.82). When using this 3 factor model, for a patient with a cesarean birth, receipt of antibiotics per physician discretion, and university education, the probability of peripartum infection was 35 % (95 % CI 0.11–0.73). Conclusions: While several variables such as parity are associated with infectious morbidity within 6 weeks among high risk laboring patients in Cameroon, only education level, antibiotic indication, and cesarean birth were independently associated, and a model including these 3 factors was moderately predictive. Validation of our findings in a larger population is warranted.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)9-14
Number of pages6
JournalEuropean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Reproductive Biology
Volume293
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2024

Funding

This was presented as a poster (ID #244) at the 42 nd annual Society of Maternal Fetal Medicine conference February 4, 2022. The funding support from the Merck grant is listed above.

Keywords

  • Cesarean section
  • Chorioamnionitis
  • Education level
  • Maternal morbidity
  • Sepsis
  • Wound infection

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Reproductive Medicine
  • Obstetrics and Gynecology

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