A bacterial infection found in one-in-five pregnant women worldwide is responsible for an estimated 147,000 stillbirths and infant deaths each year, and a vaccine is urgently needed, researchers said Monday.
The is the first comprehensive look at the impact of Group B Streptococcus infection (GBS), which is estimated to live harmlessly in the intestinal tracts of up to a third of all adults.
When a pregnant woman carries the bacteria, it can pass to her fetus via the amniotic fluid, or during birth as the infant passes through the vaginal canal.
Babies and fetuses are particularly vulnerable because their immune systems are not strong enough to fight the multiplying bacteria.
If untreated, GBS can lead to meningitis and septicemia, which can be deadly. Babies that survive may develop cerebral palsy, or permanent sight and hearing problems.
There is no vaccine available to prevent GBS, although work is in progress to develop one.
The findings, led by researchers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, estimated that out of 410,000 GBS cases every year, there will be at least 147,000 stillbirths and infant deaths globally.
The greatest burden was seen in Africa, which experiences 54 per cent of infections and 65 per cent of stillbirths and infant deaths from GBS, said the report, released at the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Annual Meeting in Baltimore.
The top five countries where pregnant women are infected are India (2,466,500) China (1,934,900), Nigeria (1,060,000), the United States (942,800) and Indonesia (799,100), according to the report.
Researchers said the scale of the problem merits more urgency.
"These disease burden estimates highlight the importance of perinatal infection prevention," said co-author Johan Vekemans, medical officer of the Initiative for Vaccine Research at the World Health Organization.
"It is now essential to accelerate the GBS vaccine development activities. The technical feasibility is estimated to be high."
If a vaccine is developed that is at least 80 percent effective and reaches 90 per cent of women, it could potentially prevent 231,000 cases of infant and maternal GBS, said the report.
Currently, women with GBS are given antibiotics during labor to reduce the chance of it passing to their baby.
But there are problems with this approach, said co-author Joy Lawn, professor of maternal, reproductive and child health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
"Antibiotics currently prevent an estimated 29,000 cases of early-onset Group B Streptococcal disease per year, almost all in high-income settings," she said.
"However, this approach may be difficult in low-income settings where many births take place at home," she added.
"In addition, giving antibiotics to 21.7 million women may contribute to antimicrobial resistance -- a major global health crisis."