Tuberculosis Infection in Women of Reproductive Age and Their Infants
NCT03305991 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 2120
Last updated 2024-03-13
Summary
Women living in low-income countries are at elevated risk of death in connection to pregnancy, as well as infants born to women in such settings. It is probable that several factors are involved, such as poverty, lack of education and access to healthcare. Infectious diseases constitute important threats to maternal health in resource-limited settings. Tuberculosis (TB) is reported to be the third leading cause of maternal death globally. Furthermore, TB can be transmitted from mother to child during pregnancy, with high risk of severe consequences for the infant. Despite these data, neither the role of TB in relation to co-existing risk factors for adverse pregnancy outcomes, nor the mechanisms involved, are well understood. It is likely that TB interacts with other characteristics, in particular socio-economic condition and HIV infection, which could obscure associations between TB and pregnancy outcomes. For this reason, it is critical to design studies so that the independent role of TB can be deduced.
This project aims to investigate how TB infection in women affects the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes in relation to co-existing factors, and how exposure to TB infection may impact growth and development of infants born to women with TB. In addition, mechanisms in which TB and the immune system during pregnancy will be explored.
The project is conducted at public health facilities in Ethiopia, where 2 000 women have been recruited during antenatal care. These women will be followed until 5 years after delivery, along with their offspring born during the study period. Detailed data is collected at inclusion and at study visits during follow-up, with submission of samples for TB testing and immunological analyses.
Better knowledge on the characteristics of TB infection in association with pregnancy, and how TB affects maternal and child health, can be used to construct new guidelines for management of TB in women of fertile age. This may contribute to reductions in adverse pregnancy outcomes, including maternal and infant deaths.
Conditions
- Tuberculosis
- Pregnancy Complications
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Lund University
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Per Bjorkman, MD, PhD · Lund University
Eligibility
- Sex
- FEMALE
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2015-12-01
- Primary Completion
- 2024-03-12
- Completion
- 2024-03-12
Countries
- Ethiopia
Study Locations
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