Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2022)

Fetal Loss and Preterm Birth Caused by Intraamniotic Haemophilus influenzae Infection, New Zealand

  • Thomas Hills,
  • Caitlin Sharpe,
  • Thomas Wong,
  • Tim Cutfield,
  • Arier Lee,
  • Stephen McBride,
  • Matthew Rogers,
  • May Ching Soh,
  • Amanda Taylor,
  • Susan Taylor,
  • Mark Thomas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2809.220313
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 9
pp. 1747 – 1754

Abstract

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Invasive Haemophilus influenzae infection during pregnancy can cause preterm birth and fetal loss, but the mechanism is unclear. We investigated 54 cases of pregnancy-associated invasive H. influenzae disease in 52 unique pregnancies in the Auckland region of New Zealand during October 1, 2008‒September 30, 2018. Intraamniotic infection was identified in 36 (66.7%) of 54 cases. Outcome data were available for 48 pregnancies. Adverse pregnancy outcomes, defined as fetal loss, preterm birth, or the birth of an infant requiring intensive/special care unit admission, occurred in 45 (93.8%) of 48 (pregnancies. Fetal loss occurred in 17 (35.4%) of 48 pregnancies, before 24 weeks’ gestation in 13 cases, and at >24 weeks’ gestation in 4 cases. The overall incidence of pregnancy-associated invasive H. influenzae disease was 19.9 cases/100,000 births, which exceeded the reported incidence of pregnancy-associated listeriosis in New Zealand. We also observed higher rates in younger women and women of Māori ethnicity.

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