This study will be conducted as a prospective cohort study, enrolling all eligible women in their first trimester of pregnancy during a baseline visit during week 6-13 of pregnancy at Government Medical College Hospital, Nagpur. The Hospital provides primary, secondary, and tertiary care and the obstetric department delivers about 10,000 babies a year. The hypothesis is that co-infection of other respiratory viruses (ORV), particularly COVID-19 and Influenza increases the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes in mothers and babies and could address the current standard of care in India to not vaccinate pregnant women during pregnancy, by either encouraging vaccination against both viruses before planning a pregnancy or during pregnancy based on global data supporting the safety of this strategy.
All pregnant women enrolled in the study will receive standard of care throughout their pregnancy, labor and delivery and post-partum to discharge. Wherever possible, study visits will coincide with regular antenatal (ANC) care and blood draws will be added to standard blood draws during ANC, labor and delivery and postpartum care. Women will be counselled about procedure to reduce the risk of acquiring ORV during pregnancy. Since this study is observational, we do not anticipate any specific safety concerns with study interviews and procedures, but the investigators will monitor potential adverse events to determine if they are likely or possibly study related. PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: Determine the prevalence, incidence, and maximal severity of symptomatic or asymptomatic COVID-19 in pregnant women to day 42 postpartum/after miscarriage on maternal outcomes. Secondary analysis will evaluate whether influenza/Other Respiratory Viruses (ORV) infection or COVID-19 vaccination modifies or mediates this risk. SECONDARY OBJECTIVE: Determine the effect of maternal COVID-19 infection on the fetus and/or neonate during pregnancy through day 7 of life. Secondary analysis will focus on whether influenza/ORV or vaccination modifies, and pre-term birth mediates this risk. EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVE: Characterize patterns and trajectories of host response/ inflammatory biomarkers as potential mediators of COVID-19 ± Influenza and ORV infection on progression to severe illness in pregnant women/mothers admitted to Government Medical College hospital with COVID-19. Modifiers include COVID-19 , Influenza and other ORV vaccinations.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
10,000
COVID-19, Influenza and ORV impact on the pregnant woman, her fetus and newborn
Boston University School of Public Health, Global Health
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITINGGovernment. Medical College Hospital
Nagpur, India
RECRUITINGMaternal composite adverse outcome variable
The maternal composite variable includes any of following 3 outcomes: * Preterm labour, defined as hospitalization for the management of onset of labor before fetus age 37 weeks, regardless of when birth occurs; * Pre-eclampsia with severe features, defined as the new onset of systolic blood pressure \>160 mm Hg and/or diastolic blood pressure \>110 mm Hg and proteinuria (World Health Organization (WHO) definition); * Mortality at any time between enrolment and day 42 post-partum/after miscarriage.
Time frame: 1 year
Perinatal composite adverse outcome variable
The perinatal adverse outcomes includes any of the following 3 outcomes: * Preterm birth, defined as gestational age of \<37 weeks at birth, based on gestational age dating by ultrasound obtained before study enrolment; * Neonatal critical illness, defined as any sign of critical illness in the newborn and/or continued hospitalization after day 7 of life; * Perinatal Mortality, defined as fetal mortality after week 20 of pregnancy through neonatal death by day 7 of life
Time frame: 1 year
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