AI Article Synopsis

  • Immunization of pregnant women is an important public health approach aimed at reducing health risks for both mothers and infants.
  • The safety and effectiveness of vaccines for this population often require combining interventional and observational study methods, involving large groups of participants to identify rare side effects.
  • Challenges in enrolling pregnant women, especially in low- and middle-income countries, include regulatory uncertainties, lack of data, recruitment difficulties, and inconsistencies in research methods, which can be addressed through better study designs, tailored recruitment strategies, and standardized data collection.

Article Abstract

Immunization of pregnant women is a promising public health strategy to reduce morbidity and mortality among both the mothers and their infants. Establishing safety and efficacy of vaccines generally uses a hybrid design between a conventional interventional study and an observational study that requires enrolling thousands of study participants to detect an unknown number of uncommon events. Historically, enrollment of pregnant women in clinical research studies encountered many barriers based on risk aversion, lack of knowledge, and regulatory ambiguity. Conducting research enrolling pregnant women in low- and middle-income countries can have additional factors to address such as limited availability of baseline epidemiologic data on disease burden and maternal and neonatal outcomes during and after pregnancy; challenges in recruiting and retaining pregnant women in research studies, variability in applying and interpreting assessment methods, and variability in locally acceptable and available infrastructure. Some measures to address these challenges include adjustment of study design, tailoring recruitment, consent process, retention strategies, operational and logistical processes, and the use of definitions and data collection methods that will align with efforts globally.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5714435PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.03.103DOI Listing

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