Abstract

Human brucellosis during pregnancy is characterized by significantly less pronounced adverse obstetric outcomes than in animals, but with remarkably more adverse obstetric outcomes when compared to healthy pregnant women. Seroprevalence of brucellosis in pregnancy and cumulative incidence of brucellosis cases per 1000 delivered obstetrical discharges in endemic regions were reported to be 1.5–12.2% and 0.42–3.3, respectively. Depending on the region, the frequency of pregnant women in the cohorts of patients with brucellosis was from 1.5% to 16.9%. The most common and the most dramatic unfavorable outcomes during brucellosis in pregnancy are the obstetric ones, manifested as abortions (2.5–54.5%), intrauterine fetal death (0–20.6%), or preterm deliveries (1.2–28.6%), depending on the stage of pregnancy. Other unfavorable outcomes due to brucellosis are addressed to infant (congenital/neonatal brucellosis, low birth weight, development delay, or even death), the clinical course of disease in mother, and delivery team exposure. When diagnosed in pregnant women, brucellosis should be treated as soon as possible. Early administration of adequate therapy significantly reduces the frequency of adverse outcomes. Rifampicin in combination with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for 6 weeks is the most commonly used and recommended regimen, although monotherapies with each of these two drugs are also widely used while waiting for the results from prospective randomized therapeutic trials. As no effective human vaccine exists, screening of pregnant women and education of all women of childbearing age about brucellosis should be compulsory preventive measures in endemic regions.

Highlights

  • Human brucellosis is one of the most common zoonoses in the world and important public health problem in many parts of Africa, South and Central America, Asia, and the Mediterranean region [1,2]

  • Some contemporary data suggest that brucellosis has a significant role in adverse obstetric outcomes in humans, and they imply that Brucella species may produce human abortions more frequently than other bacterial pathogens [25]

  • This is crucial for implantation during the early stages of pregnancy and could possibly play a central role during early abortion in women with brucellosis [45]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Human brucellosis is one of the most common zoonoses in the world and important public health problem in many parts of Africa, South and Central America, Asia, and the Mediterranean region [1,2]. It is important to emphasize that, as a control group in these three studies, the prevalence of abortions among the general population was investigated instead of abortion prevalence among seronegative women Contrary to these findings, some contemporary data suggest that brucellosis has a significant role in adverse obstetric outcomes in humans, and they imply that Brucella species may produce human abortions more frequently than other bacterial pathogens [25]. Addition, it has been recently observed that pathogenic Brucella species can proliferate in human trophoblasts and are able to interfere with the invasive capacity of extravillous trophoblasts This is crucial for implantation during the early stages of pregnancy and could possibly play a central role during early abortion in women with brucellosis [45]. Obstetric outcomes are manifested as favorable (full-term delivery) and unfavorable

Obstetric outcomes
Findings
CONCLUSION
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