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French Experience of 2009 A/H1N1v Influenza in Pregnant Women

  • Grégory Dubar,

    Affiliation Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • Elie Azria,

    Affiliation Service de Gynécologie-Obstétrique, Hôpital Bichat, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Diderot, Paris, France

  • Antoine Tesnière,

    Affiliation Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • Hervé Dupont,

    Affiliation Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation, Hôpital d'Amiens, Université d'Amiens, Amiens, France

  • Camille Le Ray,

    Affiliation Service de Gynécologie-Obstétrique, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • Thomas Baugnon,

    Affiliation Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation, Hôpital Necker, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • Sophie Matheron,

    Affiliation Service de Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales, Hôpital Bichat, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Diderot, Paris, France

  • Dominique Luton,

    Affiliation Service de Gynécologie-Obstétrique, Hôpital Beaujon, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Diderot, Paris, France

  • Jean-Christophe Richard,

    Affiliation Service de Réanimation Médicale, Hôpital Charles Nicolle, Université de Rouen, Rouen, France

  • Odile Launay,

    Affiliation Centre d'Investigation Clinique de Vaccinologie, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • Vassilis Tsatsaris,

    Affiliation Service de Gynécologie-Obstétrique, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • François Goffinet,

    Affiliation Service de Gynécologie-Obstétrique, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • Alexandre Mignon ,

    alexandre.mignon@cch.aphp.fr

    Affiliation Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France

  • for the French Registry on 2009 A/H1N1v during pregnancy

Abstract

Background

The first reports on the pandemic influenza 2009 A/H1N1v from the USA, Mexico, and Australia indicated that this disease was associated with a high mortality in pregnant women. The aim of this study was to describe and compare the characteristics of severe critically ill and non-severe pregnant women with 2009 A/H1N1v-related illness in France.

Methodology/Principal Findings

A national registry was created to screen pregnant women with laboratory-confirmed 2009 A/H1N1v influenza. Three hundred and fifteen patients from 46 French hospitals were included: 40 patients were admitted to intensive care units (severe outcomes), 111 were hospitalized in obstetric or medical wards (moderate outcomes), and 164 were outpatients (mild outcomes). The 2009 A/H1N1v influenza illness occurred during all pregnancy trimesters, but most women (54%), notably the severe patients (70%), were in the third trimester. Among the severe patients, twenty (50%) underwent mechanical ventilation, and eleven (28%) were treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Three women died from A/H1N1v influenza. We found a strong association between the development of a severe outcome and both co-existing illnesses (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 5.1; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.2–11.8) and a delay in oseltamivir treatment after the onset of symptoms (>3 or 5 days) (adjusted OR, 4.8; 95% CI, 1.9–12.1 and 61.2, 95% CI; 14.4–261.3, respectively). Among the 140 deliveries after 22 weeks of gestation known to date, 19 neonates (14%) were admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit, mainly for preterm delivery, and two neonates died. None of these neonates developed 2009 A/H1N1v infection.

Conclusions

This series confirms the high incidence of complications in pregnant women infected with pandemic A/H1N1v observed in other countries but depicts a lower overall maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity than indicated in the USA or Australia. Moreover, our data demonstrate the benefit of early oseltamivir treatment in this specific population.

Introduction

Data from previous influenza pandemics have indicated that pregnant women have a higher risk for morbidity and mortality than do non-pregnant women [1][4]. The emergence of pandemic influenza A/H1N1 in America and Australia in early 2009 raised further awareness and concern in Europe [5], [6]. Indeed, the first reports from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) [7] and Australia [8] indicated a severe mortality and even susceptibility to an increase in the 2009 maternal mortality ratio in the United States [9].

The A/H1N1v pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on June 11th, 2009. Alerts about the increased mortality in pregnant women arrived from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in late June [7]. The “Collège National des Gynéco-Obstétriciens Français” (CNGOF), the “Société Française d'Anesthésie Réanimation” (SFAR), the “Société de Pathologie Infectieuse de Langue Française” (SPILF), and the French Ministry of Health published guidelines in August 2009 on the management of influenza-like illness (ILI) in pregnant women, which were actualized in November 2009 [10][11].

Briefly, whenever a pregnant woman presented with possible ILI, i.e., fever >37.8°C and cough or sore throat, clinicians were asked to assess the illness severity and respiratory compromise using physical exams and tests, such as pulse oximetry, chest X-ray or arterial blood gases, as clinically indicated. Clinical and social risk factors (e.g., coexisting diseases such as asthma, obstetric issues such as preterm labor, and inability to perform self-care or to arrange follow-up if necessary) were also assessed. In cases of severe disease, admission to an ICU was recommended, whereas women with mild or moderate diseases were referred to obstetric or medical wards to exclude other possible diagnoses, to perform an obstetric follow-up, and to initiate treatment. Women with mild outcomes without clinical or social risk factors were treated as soon as possible in an ambulatory setting. Antiviral treatment (oseltamivir: 75 mg per os twice per day for 5 days) was initiated as soon as possible after the onset of symptoms. Systematic reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for influenza A/H1N1 using nasal or throat swabs was performed during the pandemic period (after December 8, it was only recommended for severe patients), whereas it was discontinued for the general population. Pregnant women were identified as one of the initial target groups to receive the 2009 A/H1N1v monovalent non-adjuvant vaccine as soon as it was available (November 20th, 2009 in France).

Meanwhile, the National Institute for Public Health Surveillance (InVS, Institut National de Veille Sanitaire) recorded all cases of pandemic flu, either confirmed or suspected and either severe or moderate, in the French general population until November 2, at which time surveillance was only maintained for the most severe patients (those requiring intensive care) [12]. Therefore, no data are available regarding the number of pregnant or postpartum women with confirmed or suspected H1N1 pandemic flu (hospitalized or not), except for the most severe patients who were hospitalized in the ICU in France. Moreover, the InVS registry could not address the identification of risk factors involved in the development of the most severe outcomes of flu among pregnant women or the obstetric or neonatal outcomes.

We launched a web-based national registry (R3G, French National Registry on Flu during Pregnancy) under the aegis of four medical societies (CNGOF, SFAR, SRLF, and SPILF) and a collaboration with REVA (a specific French registry on critical care and ventilation). The aim of this registry was to record cases of pregnant or postpartum women with laboratory-confirmed 2009 A/H1N1v virus infection from August 1st through December 31st, 2009 in metropolitan France to conduct a more comprehensive epidemiological study.

Here, we report the main demographic characteristics, maternal clinical course, treatment, and fetal and neonatal outcomes of 2009 A/H1N1v-infected pregnant or postpartum women with severe outcomes (admitted to the ICU), moderate outcomes (admitted to medical or obstetric wards), or mild outcomes (treated as outpatients) recorded in France during this period.

Methods

Implementation of the French registry

From August 1st through December 31st, 2009, French physicians were invited to report all confirmed cases of 2009 influenza A/H1N1 in pregnant or postpartum women to the web-based French National Registry on Flu during Pregnancy. Women who demonstrated an onset of symptoms from 48 hours to 6 weeks after delivery were considered postpartum patients. A confirmed case was defined as a pregnant or postpartum women that presented with ILI and the diagnosis of 2009 influenza A/H1N1v by specific RT-PCR. Severe patients were defined as those who were admitted to an ICU, whereas moderate or mild patients were those who were admitted to medical or obstetric wards or treated as outpatients in the ambulatory setting, respectively.

The registry was based on the spontaneous reports of clinicians. French obstetricians, anesthesiologists, and intensivists were informed of the registry via nationwide e-mailing, specific intervention on the website of the scientific societies, and communication in several national meetings. A specific anonymous form was created on a specific and independent secured website. The report form was standardized and included data on demographics, past medical history, underlying medical diseases, clinical presentation and course (for the mother and the fetus), treatment and pregnancy outcome, if available.

We collected data on mothers' height and weight before pregnancy or on admission, any coexisting illnesses, gravidity, parity, estimated date of delivery, plurality, miscarriage (defined as fetal loss before 22 weeks of gestation), previous vaccination against seasonal or pandemic A/H1N1v influenza, and any medical or obstetric problems that developed during the current pregnancy. Obesity was defined as a pre-conception BMI over 30 kg/m2. We documented the date and time of delivery, the occurrence of labor (either spontaneous or induced), the indications for surgical delivery (such as maternal hypoxia or difficult ventilation, maternal hemodynamic instability, and/or fetal compromise), and the use of corticosteroids to induce fetal lung maturation. For each newborn, we recorded the method of birth (vaginal or surgical delivery), gestational age, birth weight, whether the newborns were live born or stillborn (fetal death ≥22 completed weeks of gestation), Apgar score at five minutes, admission and duration of admission to a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) or special care nursery, neonatal infection with 2009 A/H1N1v influenza, the occurrence of any complications, and survival at the time of hospital discharge. Maternal and neonatal outcomes were last updated on March 31st, 2010. We made no assumptions regarding missing data. Missing data were excluded from the analysis, and all proportions were calculated as percentages of the patients with available data.

Regarding the most severe outcomes, REVA provided the missing data or files to be as exhaustive as possible, at least for this group of patients. From June 1st through December 29th, 2009, 1015 hospitalizations for severe outcomes and 198 deaths related to suspected- or RT-PCR-confirmed 2009 H1N1 influenza were identified through enhanced surveillance in France by the InVS. Among these severe outcomes and deaths, 51 were recorded as pregnant or postpartum women [13].

Patients included in the R3G database were divided into three groups depending on the severity of the disease and the level of care: outpatient management for mild disease without other medical or social risk factors; hospitalization in obstetric or medical wards for moderate disease; and hospitalization in the ICU for severe disease.

The present study was an epidemiological study conducted under the aegis of four French medical societies (SFAR, CNGOF, SRLF, SPILF). All anonymous files concerning pregnant women with H1N1 pandemic flu were registered via the national secured website declared to and allowed by the CNIL, which is our National Committee on Informatics and Liberty. Data collection was conducted as part of an urgent public health response and was deemed exempt from review by an institutional review board. The data were collected from all regions of France, and therefore, no informed consent could be obtained from the patients.

Statistical analysis

Continuous variables are expressed as means ± SD or medians [min-max] as indicated, and categorical variables are expressed as percentages. A comparison of the quantitative variables or proportions across groups was performed among the 3 groups using ANOVA with post-hoc tests or the chi-square or Fisher's exact test as appropriate. The odds ratio for developing a severe outcome and the 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated using a conditional forward stepwise logistic regression. Only the variables that were significant at a limit of 5% in the univariate analysis were included in the multivariate model. A value of p<0.05 was considered significant.

Results

From August 1st through December 31st, 2009, 315 pregnant or postpartum women with confirmed 2009 A/H1N1v influenza were included in the R3G database, and subsequent data were collected by the French web-based registry. Among these patients, 164 (52%) were outpatients, 111 (35%) were hospitalized in obstetric or medical wards, and 40 (13%) were hospitalized in an ICU. Dates of symptom onset ranged from July 21st to December 30th, 2009 (Fig. 1), but most of the cases occurred between the 42nd and 49th week of 2009.

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Figure 1. Temporal repartition of laboratory-confirmed 2009 A/H1N1v infection among pregnant women in the French registry according to patient status.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013112.g001

Among the 164 outpatient women, 109 (66%) were in the first or second trimester of pregnancy, whereas 87 of the 111 hospitalized non-severe outcome women (78%) and 27 of the 40 ICU (most severe) patients (68%) were in the third trimester of pregnancy (Fig. 2, p<0.001). Only one ICU patient presented with influenza symptoms two days after an elective cesarean section following an uneventful pregnancy and was the single postpartum case. Five patients were twin pregnancies, and none of them had a severe outcome. Four women developed 2009 pandemic A/H1N1v influenza infection despite vaccination with the 2009 H1N1 monovalent vaccine. Notably, these four women had received the first injection of the vaccine less than 10 days before the onset of flu.

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Figure 2. Gestational age at onset of symptoms according to the severity of symptoms.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013112.g002

The main characteristics of the patients are summarized in Table 1. Coexisting illnesses were frequent, especially among ICU patients (23 of 40, 58%). In contrast, pregnancy per se was the only risk factor in 71% and 73% of the moderate and mild outcomes, respectively (p<0.001). Asthma (9%) and obesity (12%) were the most frequent co-morbidities among the 315 patients. Whereas there was no significant difference in the prevalence of obesity among the three groups, chronic respiratory disease was significantly more frequently reported among women admitted to the ICU (11 of 40, 28%) compared to the two other groups (p<0.001). Among the nine ICU patients with a history of asthma, four reported taking daily medication, which indicated severe chronic disease. The two other ICU patients with pulmonary disease had a restrictive syndrome (Steinert's disease and severe homozygous sickle cell anemia).

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Table 1. Characteristics of pregnant or postpartum women with 2009 A/H1N1v influenza infection.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013112.t001

The most common symptoms of flu observed in this population were fever (86%), cough (84%), muscle aches (54%), headache (36%), and nausea/vomiting (10%), as shown in Table 2. Shortness of breath (22%) was more frequently reported among severe outcome ICU patients (p<0.001).

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Table 2. Influenza symptoms, clinical course, and treatments of pregnant or postpartum women with 2009 A/H1N1v influenza.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013112.t002

All patients who presented with severe outcomes received antiviral treatment (oseltamivir alone or in combination with zanamivir in two patients) (Table 2). However, the delay from symptom onset to the initiation of antiviral treatment was more than 48 hours in 22 of the 40 (55%) ICU patients (median time 3 days [min-max 0-18]). In contrast, moderate and mild outcomes demonstrated a shorter duration to the initiation of antiviral treatment as compared to severe outcomes: 80 and 88% of moderate and mild outcomes, respectively, were treated less than 48 hours after onset of the illness (p<0.001).

Antibiotic therapy, mainly amoxicillin or cephalosporin combined with spiramycin, was often initially co-prescribed with the antiviral treatment in hospitalized patients (in 80% and 68% of cases of severe or moderate disease, respectively).

Among moderate outcomes, 94 (85%) were observed and treated in obstetric wards and 17 (15%) in medical wards. The most common reason for admission was ILI. Sixteen hospitalized women in the obstetric ward were admitted only for monitoring in the absence of severe influenza symptoms or pregnancy complications, mainly during the third trimester of pregnancy. Other patients were admitted for containment (n = 25), especially during the initial phase of the outbreak, pregnancy complications (n = 21), or decompensation of an underlying disease (n = 4).

Although none of the 164 outpatients required specific obstetric management, 11 of the 111 hospitalized non-severe (10%) and 23 of the 39 pre-partum severe patients (59%) required specific obstetric care, as shown in Table 2. Among the hospitalized non-severe patients, this specific obstetric care was mainly the treatment of preterm labor (8 of the 111 patients), whereas in the severe patients, it was mainly a cesarean section (17 of the 39 prepartum severe patients). Most of these 17 cesarean sections were conducted for maternal hypoxemia or a worsening condition. These cesarean sections induced preterm birth in only 13 patients: 1 at less than 29 weeks GA, 4 between 29 and 31 weeks GA, and 8 between 32 and 36 weeks GA. In contrast, there was no short-term fetal impact of the flu pandemic in the fetuses of 260 of 264 pregnant women with moderate or mild outcomes of the disease (98%) for whom data are available.

Forty women (13%) were hospitalized in the ICU. The mean SAPS II and SOFA scores at admission were 28±19 and 4±3, respectively. These patients were slightly younger (p = 0.001) than the non-severe patients. Ten (25%) had delivered prior to ICU admission. Most of the women (95%) were admitted to the ICU because of a respiratory failure, as shown in Table 3. At the time of admission, 32 of 40 women had pneumonia with an abnormal chest radiography or chest computed tomography (80%). Ten women (25%) presented with a documented secondary pulmonary infection during the hospital stay (Streptococcus sp., Haemophilus influenza, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Aspergillus fumigatus, cytomegalovirus), and most of them were ventilator-associated pneumonias. Only four ICU patients had a documented bacterial co-infection at the time of admission (Streptococcus sp. in one woman and Streptococcus pneumoniae in three women). Cardiac dysfunction was observed in 17 patients (43%), either associated with respiratory failure in 16 patients or as a myocarditis without respiratory failure in the other patient. Twenty patients (50%) required mechanical ventilation for a median time of 13 days [2–55]. Among the twenty patients who required mechanical ventilation, eleven patients also required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for a median duration of 8 days [4–38], among which nine survived. Five patients (13%) required non-invasive ventilation, and 15 (38%) required only mask or nasal oxygenation. The median ICU length of stay was 10 days [2–80]. Other ICU treatments are detailed in Table 3.

Three women died (8%). Two of them were in the third trimester of pregnancy at symptom onset, and the third was in the second trimester. All of these patients had coexisting illnesses: obesity in one (body mass index: 31 kg/m2), severe thrombotic microangiopathy in another, and cardiac valvular disease (mitral stenosis and aortic regurgitation) in the last patient. Only one of them received antiviral medication within 48 hours after symptom onset. The other two received oseltamivir at 8 and 9 days after first symptom onset, likely due to poor access to care. Refractory acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS, PaO2/FiO2<200) was diagnosed in two of these three patients for whom ECMO was unsuccessful; the third patient with acute lung injury (ALI, 200<PaO2/FiO2<300) received only protective mechanical ventilation but died due to massive cerebral ischemia in the context of thrombotic microangiopathy.

The multivariate analysis of risk factors for developing a severe outcome is shown in Table 4. We found a strong association between the development of a severe outcome from flu and both co-existing illnesses (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 5.1; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.2–11.8; p<0.001) and a delay in oseltamivir treatment after the onset of symptoms (>3 or 5 days) (adjusted OR, 4.8; 95% CI, 1.9–12.1, p = 0.001, and 61.2; 95% CI, 14.4–261.3, p<0.001, respectively).

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Table 4. Impact of coexisting illnesses and the timing of antiviral treatment on admission to an intensive care unit.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013112.t004

On March 31st, 2009, pregnancy outcomes were known for 146 of the 231 patients with an estimated delivery date prior to March 31st (63%). Most of the outpatients and non-ICU hospitalized women delivered vaginally (85% and 73%, respectively), as shown in Table 5. Among the 45 outpatient women who had delivered, only three of their neonates required immediate resuscitation. Moreover, only one of the 45 neonates of the outpatient women for whom data were available was admitted to the neonatal ICU.

In contrast, most of the severe outcome ICU-admitted women were delivered by cesarean section (20 of 33) with a median gestational age of 33 weeks. Most of the cesarean deliveries (17 of 20) were directly related to influenza illness. These cesarean sections were mainly emergent procedures for both fetal indications and critical maternal hypoxemia (9 of 17). In two patients, the cesarean section was performed only for fetal indications (non-reassuring fetal heart rate), and in six patients, it was performed only to improve maternal oxygenation. In two patients, the cesarean section was performed in the ICU because of severe refractory hypoxemia that was incompatible with transfer to an operating room.

Half of the neonates of women admitted to the ICU for whom data were available were admitted to the NICU, as shown in Table 5. Among the three maternal deaths, one had delivered a healthy full-term neonate at term by cesarean section (indicated because of thrombotic microangiopathy) before the ICU admission, one experienced an intra-uterine fetal death at 21 weeks of gestation, and the third delivered at 34 weeks of gestation by cesarean section to improve maternal oxygenation and for fetus salvation. This infant was admitted to the neonatal ICU due to prematurity and low Apgar scores (5 at 1 minute, 7 at 5 minutes) and had survived at the time of NICU discharge. Data collection for definitive neonatal morbidity and mortality is still in progress, but to date, no cases of A/H1N1v influenza have been reported in neonates.

Discussion

These are the first reported results of the largest cohort of pregnant or postpartum women with confirmed 2009 A/H1N1v influenza, including severe, moderate, and mild outcomes of the disease, in a European country involved in the flu outbreak at the end of 2009.

Several comments are raised by this study. First, the present results confirm the data reported for past pandemics [1][4], which indicate an increased risk for pregnant and/or postpartum woman in developing a severe outcome of pneumonia and/or ARDS during pandemic flu. Earlier in the spring and summer of 2009, similar observations from the USA, Mexico, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand were published, with pregnant or postpartum patients accounting for 8 to 10% of H1N1-related critically ill patients and 2 to 4% of deaths, whereas child-bearing-aged women in these countries represent roughly 1% of the population [8], [14][16]. Our current data confirm that in France, pregnancy again constituted a significant risk factor for severe illness during the 2009 pandemic flu. Interestingly, Hanslik et al. measured the risk for admission into an intensive care unit for a pregnant woman and found an odds ratio of 5 [95% CI 4.0–6.9] [17].

Second, and in contrast with the above-mentioned experience from the 2009 pandemic influenza in other countries [7], [9], [18][20], pregnancy did not seem to significantly increase mortality in our country. The R3G registry indeed recorded only three deaths in France in pregnant or postpartum patients, and this finding was confirmed by the InVS. In the work by Hanslik, heart failure, obesity, and diabetes, but not pregnancy, were significantly associated with death in France [17]. Interestingly, very recent data from other countries in Asia, although comprising a smaller series and from a single center, seemed to demonstrate the same trend [21]. It is tempting to hypothesize that such an observation could be partially to the following factors: (i) first, patient characteristics (less obesity or coexisting diseases in our population and in our patients in comparison with other series). Comparisons of the incidence of co-existing illness between our cohort and the American and Australian ones [18][20] revealed a lower incidence of obesity (12% versus 20 to 42%) and asthma (9% versus 12 to 20%); (ii) second, early diagnosis and a shorter delay until the initiation of antiviral treatment in our study, retrospectively validating the French guidelines; (iii) third, very good compliance of the physicians and patients; (iv) fourth, an increased awareness of the specific severity of pandemic flu during pregnancy arising from international experience.

When comparing non-severe with severe outcomes of pandemic flu in French pregnant or postpartum women in the registry, the main results were as follows: i) a lower incidence of coexisting illnesses (28% compared with 58%), mainly respiratory disease, and ii) a significantly shorter delay between the onset of disease and initiation of oseltamivir treatment. Evidence for the benefit of oseltamivir in preventing influenza complications remains insufficient to date [22], yet suggested by our series and those from the USA or Australia [18][20]. In April 2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported on 788 pregnant women in the United States with 2009 A/H1N1v influenza with symptom onset from April through August 2009 [23]. Among these patients, early antiviral treatment appeared to be associated with fewer admissions to an ICU and fewer deaths, although this result was not adjusted for coexisting illnesses or the pregnancy trimester. Our series confirmed that a delay in oseltamivir treatment after the onset of symptoms constituted an independent risk factor associated with the development of more severe outcomes of 2009 A/H1N1v influenza in pregnant women. We hypothesize that earlier treatment with oseltamivir may also reflect easier access to care and more informed physicians, which may have allowed for prompt recognition of the most severe patients, thus reducing subsequent severe morbidity or mortality due to better triage and care.

Finally, the obstetric and neonatal consequences of pandemic flu observed in France appeared to be rather limited. Consistent with the first reports from Victoria in Australia [19], New York [20], and California [9], the 2009 A/H1N1v influenza illness significantly increased the need for cesarean section delivery, mainly due to worsening maternal conditions. Cesarean section did not seem to worsen maternal conditions, because only one of the 17 women died with critical hypoxemia. Intensive management for maternal hypoxia, including extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, also led to better than expected outcomes when compared with the usual 30 to 35% mortality rate reported for ARDS. The NICU admission rate also increased, mainly because of preterm deliveries that comprised almost exclusively fetuses from the most severely ill pregnant women. In contrast, a worrisome observation from Australia and the USA reporting increased neonatal morbidity and mortality did not seem to occur in our cohort [19], [20]. Severe neonatal morbidity and mortality have remained extremely low (2 stillbirths and 2 neonatal deaths). These data are very important because they were collected from a large series of infants (146) delivered by mothers who had been treated with oseltamivir, thereby reinforcing very recent data on the safety of this antiviral drug during pregnancy [24].

One important limitation of this study was the lack of exhaustive documentation of non-severe outcomes of pregnant women who suffered from the 2009 pandemic flu in France. However, we did include 275 patients with non-severe outcomes of pandemic flu during pregnancy, which is the most important to our knowledge in Europe to date. One may argue that a comparison of mostly severe patients and some non-severe patients, who were registered based on the willingness of physicians, may be biased. Let us assume that the worst biases will cause the 275 non-severe outcomes in the registry to become less mild or moderate outcomes than were indeed the case in real life. Consequently, significant differences between severe and non-severe patients in the registry will likely be clinically significant when they are applied to the entire population.

In conclusion, the French experience of the pandemic 2009 A/H1N1v flu in pregnant women resulted in an increase in morbidity and ICU management of some patients, mainly at-risk patients who were likely diagnosed and/or treated too late. Maternal mortality has remained low and was lower than that observed in other comparable countries. Moreover, at least in France, the obstetric outcome and neonatal mortality did not appear to be seriously affected by the H1N1 outbreak. This result may be due to wider access to care, directive guidelines, good compliance from patients and physicians, and early diagnosis and treatment with oseltamivir.

What This Paper Adds

What is already known on this topic

  • Pregnant women are at an increased risk for complications and mortality due to influenza.
  • Intensive management for maternal hypoxia, including cesarean section and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, can lead to better-than-expected outcomes.

What this study adds

  • Lessons from international experience promoted national guidelines that recommend earlier treatment with oseltamivir and improved triage and care.
  • This could have been responsible for the lower maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity observed in France when compared with the USA and Australasia.

Acknowledgments

Aix en Provence, Olivier Baldesi

Amiens, Vincent Hubert and Bénédicte Toublanc

Angers, Ingrid Hornung and Nicolas Proust

Aulnay Sous Bois, Anne Jallot and José Amaro

Besançon, Stéphane Cossa

Bicêtre, Emilien Purenne

Bobigny, Hugues Cordel

Bondy, Priscille Loire

Caen, Claire Mathieu de Vienne

Chamonix, Serge Vaksmann

Clamart, David Schnell and Frederic Jacob

Clichy, Pierre-François Ceccaldi and Olivier Poujade

Colombes, Romain Jacobs and Laurent Mandelbrot

Garches, Virginie Maxime

Grenoble, Véronique Equy and Michel Durand

Lesparre Medoc, Charles Ghiringhelli

Lille, Anne-Sophie Ducloy-Bouthors, Anne-Frédérique Dalmas, and François Fourrier

Lyon, Dominique Chassard and Olivier Bastien

Marseille, Jean-Baptiste Haumonte, Christophe Guervilly, Hélène Heckenroth, and Laurent Zieleskievicz

Montpellier, Samir Jaber

Montreuil, Farid Maache

Nancy, Pierre-Edouard Bollaert, Alexis Tatopoulos, and Anne-Marie Ribon

Nantes, Xavier Duval-Arnould

Nice, Gilles Bernardin

Paris (Bichat), Audrey Hedde, Julie Pariente, Michel Wolf, and Bernard Regnier

Paris (Lariboisière), Patrice Desfeux

Paris (Necker), Minerva Cervantes

Paris (Pitié), Charles-Edouard Luyt and Jean Chastre

Paris (Cochin Port-Royal Saint Vincent de Paul), Mélanie Chartier and Louis Marcellin

Paris (Robert Debré), Marie Bornes

Paris (Saint-Antoine), Myriam Mansour

Paris (Tenon), Muriel Fartoukh

Poitiers, Olivier Mimoz

Pontoise, Gerard Trouillet

Redon, Isabelle Voisin

Rennes, Hélène Isly and Véronique Descheemaeker

Rouen, Jean Christophe Richard

Saint-Etienne, Marie-Noëlle Varlet

Sens, Dominique Gizolme and Françoise Jungfer

Suresnes, Christophe Pinet

Toulouse, Fabrice Ferré and Béatrice Riu

Tours, Pierre-François Dequin

Valenciennes, Mohamed Ali Benali and Malika Benrezkallah

Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, Bernard Maria

Versailles, Jean Marie Mallaret

We thank Daniel Levy-Bruhl (National Institute for Public Health Surveillance, InVS Institut National de Veille Sanitaire) for his support in data management.

Members of the French Registry on 2009 A/H1N1v during pregnancy:

Collège National des Gynéco-Obstétriciens Français (CNGOF)

Société Française d'Anesthésie Réanimation (SFAR)

Société de Pathologie Infectieuse de Langue Française (SPILF)

Société de Réanimation de Langue Française (SRLF)

Réseau REVA-grippe-SRLF and the Réseau de Recherche en Ventilation Artificielle (REVA)

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: GD SM DL JCR OL FG AM. Performed the experiments: GD EA AM. Analyzed the data: GD EA AT HD CLR SM DL JCR OL VT FG AM. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: GD EA TB AM. Wrote the paper: GD EA AT SM JCR OL AM.Members of the French Registry on 2009 A/H1N1v during pregnancy appear in the Acknowledgments.

References

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