Causes and circumstances of maternal death: a secondary analysis of the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) trials cohort. Issue 9 (September 2021)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Causes and circumstances of maternal death: a secondary analysis of the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) trials cohort. Issue 9 (September 2021)
- Main Title:
- Causes and circumstances of maternal death: a secondary analysis of the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) trials cohort
- Authors:
- Aukes, Annet M
Arion, Kristina
Bone, Jeffrey N
Li, Jing
Vidler, Marianne
Bellad, Mrutyunjaya B
Charantimath, Umesh
Goudar, Shivaprasad S
Hoodbhoy, Zahra
Katageri, Geetanjali
Macuacua, Salésio
Mallapur, Ashalata A
Munguambe, Khátia
Qureshi, Rahat N
Sacoor, Charfudin
Sevene, Esperança
Sheikh, Sana
Valá, Anifa
Lewis, Gwyneth
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A
von Dadelszen, Peter
Magee, Laura A
Woo Kinshella, Mai-Lei
Wong, Hubert
von Dadelszen, Peter
Vilanculo, Faustino
Vidler, Marianne
Valá, Anifa
Ukah, Ugochi V
Tu, Domena K
Thabane, Lehana
Tchavana, Corsino
Thornton, Jim
Sotunsa, John O
Singer, Joel
Sheikh, Sana
Sharma, Sumedha
Sevene, Esperança
Schuurman, Nadine
Sawchuck, Diane
Sacoor, Charfudin
Revankar, Amit P
Raza, Farrukh
Ramdurg, Umesh Y
Qureshi, Rahat N
Pires, Rosa
Payne, Beth A
Nobela, Vivalde
Nkumbula, Cláudio
Nhancolo, Ariel
Nhamirre, Zefanias
Munguambe, Khátia
Mungarwadi, Geetanjali I
Mulungo, Dulce
Mocumbi, Sibone
Mitton, Craig
Merialdi, Mario
Memon, Javed
Matavele, Analisa
Mastiholi, Sphoorthi S
Mandlate, Ernesto
Mallapur, Ashalata A
Magee, Laura A
Maculuve, Sónia
Macuacua, Salésio
Macete, Eusébio
Macamo, Marta
Lui, Mansun
Li, Jing
Lewis, Gwyneth
Lewin, Simon
Lee, Tang
Langer, Ana
Kudachi, Uday S
Kodkany, Bhalachandra S
Knight, Marian
Kengapur, Gudadayya S
Kavi, Avinash J
Katageri, Geetanjali
Kariya, Chirag
Karadiguddi, Chandrappa C
Kamble, Namdev A
Joshi, Anjali M
Hutton, Eileen
Hussain, Amjad
Honnungar, Narayan V
Hoodbhoy, Zahra
Grobman, William
Goudar, Shivaprasad S
Gonçálves, Emília
Firoz, Tabassum
Fillipi, Veronique
Filimone, Paulo
Engelbrecht, Susheela M
Dunsmuir, Dustin T
Dumont, Guy
Drebit, Sharla K
Donnay, France
Dharamsi, Shafik
Dhamanekar, Vaibhav B
Derman, Richard
Darlow, Brian
Cutana, Silvestre
Chougala, Keval S
Chiaú, Rogério
Charantimath, Umesh
Byaruhanga, Romano Nkumbwa
Bone, Jeffrey N
Boene, Helena
Biz, Ana Ilda
Bique, Cassimo
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A
Betrán, Ana Pilar
Bellad, Mrutyunjaya B
Bannale, Shashidhar G
Aukes, Annet M
Augusto, Orvalho
Arion, Kristina
Ansermino, J Mark
Amose, Felizarda
Ahmed, Imran
Adetoro, Olalekan O
… (more) - Abstract:
- Summary: Background: Incomplete vital registration systems mean that causes of death during pregnancy and childbirth are poorly understood in low-income and middle-income countries. To inform global efforts to reduce maternal mortality, we compared physician review and computerised analysis of verbal autopsies (interpreting verbal autopsies [InterVA] software), to understand their agreement on maternal cause of death and circumstances of mortality categories (COMCATs) in the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster randomised trials. Methods: The CLIP trials took place in India, Pakistan, and Mozambique, enrolling pregnant women aged 12–49 years between Nov 1, 2014, and Feb 28, 2017. 69 330 pregnant women were enrolled in 44 clusters (36 008 in the 22 intervention clusters and 33 322 in the 22 control clusters). In this secondary analysis of maternal deaths in CLIP, we included women who died in any of the 22 intervention clusters or 22 control clusters. Trained staff administered the WHO 2012 verbal autopsy after maternal deaths. Two physicians (and a third for consensus, if needed) reviewed trial surveillance data and verbal autopsies, and, in intervention clusters, community health worker-led visit data. They determined cause of death according to the WHO International Classification of Diseases-Maternal Mortality (ICD-MM). Verbal autopsies were also analysed by InterVA computer models (versions 4 and 5) to generate cause of death. COMCAT analysisSummary: Background: Incomplete vital registration systems mean that causes of death during pregnancy and childbirth are poorly understood in low-income and middle-income countries. To inform global efforts to reduce maternal mortality, we compared physician review and computerised analysis of verbal autopsies (interpreting verbal autopsies [InterVA] software), to understand their agreement on maternal cause of death and circumstances of mortality categories (COMCATs) in the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster randomised trials. Methods: The CLIP trials took place in India, Pakistan, and Mozambique, enrolling pregnant women aged 12–49 years between Nov 1, 2014, and Feb 28, 2017. 69 330 pregnant women were enrolled in 44 clusters (36 008 in the 22 intervention clusters and 33 322 in the 22 control clusters). In this secondary analysis of maternal deaths in CLIP, we included women who died in any of the 22 intervention clusters or 22 control clusters. Trained staff administered the WHO 2012 verbal autopsy after maternal deaths. Two physicians (and a third for consensus, if needed) reviewed trial surveillance data and verbal autopsies, and, in intervention clusters, community health worker-led visit data. They determined cause of death according to the WHO International Classification of Diseases-Maternal Mortality (ICD-MM). Verbal autopsies were also analysed by InterVA computer models (versions 4 and 5) to generate cause of death. COMCAT analysis was provided by InterVA-5 and, in India, by physician review of Maternal Newborn Health Registry data. Causes of death and COMCATs assigned by physician review, Inter-VA-4, and InterVA-5 were compared, with agreement assessed with Cohen's κ coefficient. Findings: Of 61 988 pregnancies with successful follow-up in the CLIP trials, 143 maternal deaths were reported (16 deaths in India, 105 in Pakistan, and 22 in Mozambique). The maternal death rate was 231 (95% CI 193–268) per 100 000 identified pregnancies. Most deaths were attributed to direct maternal causes (rather than indirect or undetermined causes as per ICD-MM classification), with fair to good agreement between physician review and InterVA-4 (κ=0·56 [95% CI 0·43–0·66]) or InterVA-5 (κ=0·44 [0·30–0·57]), and InterVA-4 and InterVA-5 (κ=0·72 [0·60–0·84]). The top three causes of death were the same by physician review, InterVA-4, and InterVA-5 (ICD-MM categories obstetric haemorrhage, non-obstetric complications, and hypertensive disorders); however, attribution of individual patient deaths to obstetric haemorrhage varied more between methods (physician review, 38 [27%] deaths; InterVA-4, 69 [48%] deaths; and InterVA-5, 82 [57%] deaths), than did attribution to non-obstetric causes (physician review, 39 [27%] deaths; InterVA-4, 37 [26%] deaths; and InterVA-5, 28 [20%] deaths) or hypertensive disorders (physician review, 23 [16%] deaths; InterVA-4, 25 [17%] deaths; and InterVA-5, 24 [17%] deaths). Agreement for all nine ICD-MM categories was fair for physician review versus InterVA-4 (κ=0·48 [0·38–0·58]), poor for physician review versus InterVA-5 (κ=0·36 [0·27–0·46]), and good for InterVA-4 versus InterVA-5 (κ=0·69 [0·59–0·79]). The most commonly assigned COMCATs by InterVA-5 were emergencies (68 [48%] of 143 deaths) and health systems (62 [43%] deaths), and by physician review (India only) were health systems (seven [44%] of 16 deaths) and inevitability (five [31%] deaths); agreement between InterVA-5 and physician review (India data only) was poor (κ=0·04 [0·00–0·15]). Interpretation: Our findings indicate that InterVA-5 is less accurate than InterVA-4 at ascertaining causes and circumstances of maternal death, when compared with physician review. Our results suggest a need to improve the next iteration of InterVA, and for researchers and clinicians to preferentially use InterVA-4 when recording maternal deaths. Funding: University of British Columbia (grantee of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation). … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Lancet. Volume 9:Issue 9(2021)
- Journal:
- Lancet
- Issue:
- Volume 9:Issue 9(2021)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 9, Issue 9 (2021)
- Year:
- 2021
- Volume:
- 9
- Issue:
- 9
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2021-0009-0009-0000
- Page Start:
- e1242
- Page End:
- e1251
- Publication Date:
- 2021-09
- Subjects:
- World health -- Periodicals
362.105 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/2214109X ↗
http://www.sciencedirect.com/ ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1016/S2214-109X(21)00263-1 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 2214-109X
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- Legaldeposit
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