# Does delocalised PCR for Streptococcus B in the labour ward allow adequate administration of antibiotics to prevent early neonatal infection?

**Authors:** Clémentine Guetat, Laetitia Roussel, Marie De Antonio, Marie Accoceberry, Céline Houlle, Fanny Petillon, Marion Rouzaire, Denis Gallot

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.bjid.2025.104553 · The Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases · 2025-05-24

## TL;DR

This study examines if using delocalised PCR testing for Streptococcus B in maternity wards ensures timely antibiotic administration to prevent early neonatal infections.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the effectiveness of delocalised PCR testing for timely antibiotic prophylaxis against Streptococcus B in labor wards.

## Key findings

- Delocalised PCR allows complete antibiotic prophylaxis in 63.6% of cases.
- Omissions in antibiotic administration occurred in 2.1% of cases due to team oversight.
- Incomplete prophylaxis was observed in 22.4% due to delivery occurring less than 4 hours after the first dose.

## Abstract

Streptococcus B is a commensal infectious agent of the intestinal and genitourinary tract. It is often implicated in early neonatal infections. Some 10 %–30 % of women are colonised by this bacterium. Screening for carriage in women before delivery prior to antibiotic prophylaxis is thus essential. In recent years, real-time PCR tests have been developed. Our main objective was to determine whether screening for Streptococcus B carriage by PCR on admission (gold standard GeneXpert) permits complete antibiotic prophylaxis.

This was an observational, retrospective study. Data set from all patients with a delocalised PCR for Streptococcus B (GeneXpert Instrument System) on arrival at the maternity hospital were collected between January 2022 and February 2023. We recorded 3467 test results, of which 344 were positive for Streptococcus B carriage. A total of 236 positive patients were included in the analysis. Antibioprophylaxis was considered complete when the patient had received at least one dose more than 4-hours before birth.

Of the 236 patients, antibiotic therapy was incomplete in 53 cases (22.4 %) because vaginal delivery or caesarean section occurred less than 4-hours after the first dose. Antibioprophylaxis was not initiated in 33 cases. The main reason was for rapid labour in 28 cases (11.9 %). The 5 remaining cases did not receive antibiotics because probable omission by the team (2.1 %).

Delocalised PCR allows complete antibiotic prophylaxis against Streptococcus B in 63.6 % of cases, offering scope for improvement. While it will not be possible to improve antibioprophylaxis in case of rapid labour (within 3 hours after arrival), we should be able to prevent omissions (2.1 %) and, above all, reduce the birth rate before the second dose (22.4 %) by administering the first dose more quickly.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neonatal (MESH:D007232), infections (MESH:D007239)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

17 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12159896/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12159896