Abstract

Maternal prenatal screening for group B streptococci (GBS) followed by offering of intrapartum chemoprophylaxis to carriers is one of the strategies used to reduce the incidence of neonatal early-onset GBS infections. Culturing of vaginal and anorectal swab specimens in selective broth is the screening procedure recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This technique is sensitive; it does not, however, allow either evaluation of the degree of colonization or detection of cocolonization with several GBS clones. We have examined the carriage rate and population dynamics of GBS in a group of Danish women during pregnancy and 1 year after delivery using a new detection method. In the present paper we describe a mixed blood agar medium (MB agar) that identifies GBS in the primary cultures by detection of a double hemolysis pattern consisting of characteristic, large zones of partial hemolysis ("CAMP zones") and of narrow zones of complete hemolysis. The MB agar was at least as sensitive as culturing in selective broth for detection of GBS in vaginal and anorectal swab specimens, and GBS strains could be identified directly on the primary plate due to the CAMP zones without the need for subculturing. The carriage rate of GBS in a group of Danish women was found to be more than 30%, a figure considerably higher than the rate that was reported previously.

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