ISRCTN ISRCTN40092247
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN40092247
IRAS number 112935
Secondary identifying numbers CPMS 14162, IRAS 112935
Submission date
27/03/2020
Registration date
01/04/2020
Last edited
10/05/2024
Recruitment status
No longer recruiting
Overall study status
Completed
Condition category
Pregnancy and Childbirth
Prospectively registered
Protocol
Statistical analysis plan
Results
Individual participant data

Plain English summary of protocol

Background and study aims
COVID-19 is a condition caused by the coronavirus (called SARS-CoV-2) that was first identified in late 2019. This virus can infect the respiratory (breathing) system. Some people do not have symptoms but can carry the virus and pass it on to others. People who have developed the condition may develop a fever and/or a continuous cough among other symptoms. This can develop into pneumonia. Pneumonia is a chest infection where the small air pockets of the lungs, called alveoli, fill with liquid and make it more difficult to breathe.
In 2020, the virus has spread to many countries around the world and neither a vaccine against the virus or specific treatment for COVID-19 has yet been developed. As of March 2020, it is advised that people minimize travel and social contact, and regularly wash their hands to reduce the spread of the virus.
Groups who are at a higher risk from infection with the virus, and therefore of developing COVID-19, include people aged over 70 years, people who have long-term health conditions (such as asthma or diabetes), people who have a weakened immune system and pregnant women. People in these groups, and people who might come into contact with them, can reduce this risk by following the up-to-date advice to reduce the spread of the virus.
In 2012, a study was set up to investigate the effects of a pandemic (widespread infection across many regions of the world) of influenza (flu) on pregnant women and their babies. This study was not activated because an influenza pandemic did not happen in the period between 2012 and 2020. That study has now been adapted to investigate the effects of coronavirus infection and treatments on pregnant women and has been activated.

Who can participate?
All pregnant women aged 16-45 years who are admitted to one of the participating hospitals with coronavirus infection.

What does the study involve?
Participants will receive treatment and care as usual. The study will record what happens in terms of the pregnancy and the health of the mother and baby up until after the baby is born. No personal details will be recorded, so the participants will not be identifiable.

What are the possible benefits and risks of participating?
There are no benefits or risks to participants as they will receive the same treatment and care as if they had not participated in the study. The information collected will not be linked to any personal data, so participants will not be identifiable and will remain completely anonymous.

Where is the study run from?
University of Oxford (UK)

When is the study starting and how long is it expected to run for?
January 2020 to March 2023

Who is funding the study?
The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (UK)

Who is the main contact?
Professor Marian Knight

Study website

Contact information

Prof Marian Knight
Scientific

National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit
Old Road Campus
University of Oxford
Oxford
OX3 7LF
United Kingdom

ORCiD logoORCID ID 0000-0002-1984-4575
Phone +44 (0)1865 289727
Email marian.knight@npeu.ox.ac.uk

Study information

Study designObservational cohort study
Primary study designObservational
Secondary study designCohort study
Study setting(s)Hospital
Study typeOther
Participant information sheet Not available in web format, please use the contact details below to request a patient information sheet
Scientific titleMaternal and perinatal outcomes of pandemic COVID-19 in pregnancy
Study objectivesThis NIHR-supported study is a national study of women hospitalised with confirmed COVID-19 in pregnancy. The study, funded by the NIHR, will use the UK Obstetric Surveillance System (UKOSS) to collect information about all pregnant women admitted to hospital who are confirmed to have coronavirus infection. The information will be analysed on a continuous basis to inform ongoing guidance for women and maternity staff as we respond to the pandemic. Specifically, the study will describe incidence, management and outcomes of COVID-19 in pregnancy and identify factors associated with better outcomes for women and their babies.
Anonymous information will be collected through the existing UK Obstetric Surveillance System (UKOSS) reporters, who are based in all maternity units in the UK. Reporters have been sent a live link to allow them to notify cases and complete an anonymous data collection form.
This is an amendment to a study established in 2012 to learn more about the effects of a future worldwide influenza epidemic and its treatment on pregnant women and their babies using the UK Obstetric Surveillance System (UKOSS). That study was not activated.
Novel coronavirus is a new strain of coronavirus that has not previously been identified in humans. An outbreak of novel coronavirus was reported in Wuhan, China, in December 2019 with increasing global transmission. It is a respiratory illness, the symptoms of which usually include cough, high temperature and feeling short of breath, but it is not known what impact the virus will have on pregnant women and their babies. In order to investigate risk factors,management and outcomes, the researchers plan to extend data collection to include data on all pregnant women hospitalised with novel coronavirus should a pandemic be declared and hence the study activated by the NIHR.
The aim of this study is to learn more about the effects of a future worldwide flu or novel coronavirus epidemic and its treatment on pregnant women and their babies. Any new virus is different from previous viruses and this means that very few people have natural immunity or resistance to it. Because the virus is new, little is known about its effect. Certain groups of people, including pregnant women, are known to be at increased risk of developing more serious problems, as was shown in the 2009-2010 H1N1 'swine flu' epidemic.
In a future pandemic, however, these observed patterns may differ, and a rapid study of this susceptible group will be important to inform both ongoing preventative and management policies. This study aims to collect anonymous information about women who are admitted to hospital in the UK with confirmed novel coronavirus infection in pregnancy in the event of a future pandemic. This information will be collected through doctors and midwives in hospitals throughout the UK using an existing information collecting system, the UK Obstetric Surveillance System (UKOSS). By studying all the pregnant women admitted to hospital, the researchers hope to identify whether certain groups of pregnant women are more at risk of the more severe problems caused by pandemic novel coronavirus, and whether any particular additional treatment in pregnancy helps lessen these risks.
Ethics approval(s)1. Original pandemic influenza study (ISRCTN44137563) approved 11/09/2012, NRES Committee East Midlands - Nottingham 1 (The Old Chapel, Royal Standard Place, Nottingham NG1 6FS; +44 (0)115 883 9309; wendy.rees@nottspct.nhs.uk), ref: 12/EM/0365
2. Amendment enabling adaptation for COVID pandemic approved 09/03/2020, NRES Committee East Midlands - Nottingham 1 (The Old Chapel, Royal Standard Place, Nottingham NG1 6FS; +44 (0)207 104 8016; nrescommittee.EastMidlands-Nottingham1@nhs.net), ref: 12/EM/0365
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studiedCOVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2 infection) in pregnant women
InterventionResearch design:
This cohort study will use the UK Obstetric Surveillance System (UKOSS) to identify women hospitalized with pandemic novel coronavirus infection in pregnancy throughout a 6-month period. Participants will receive their usual management and information will be collected subsequently, detailing their treatment and outcomes. Research participants will not be contacted directly and no personally identifiable information (names, addresses or dates of birth will be collected.

Cohort identification:
Infected women will be identified through the UKOSS network of nominated reporting clinicians in each consultant-led maternity unit in the UK. Nominated reporting clinicians will be asked to report all pregnant women with confirmed pandemic novel coronavirus infection admitted to their unit. In view of the need for rapid and ongoing data analysis and production of guidance, we will use a specific web-based rapid reporting and data collection system for this study to enable UKOSS nominated clinicians to report cases as they occur. In addition, nominated clinicians will be sent a standard UKOSS reporting card each month to further enhance case ascertainment.

Comparison group identification:
Information about comparison women will be obtained from previously conducted UKOSS studies. Previous UKOSS studies have collected detailed demographic, pregnancy and delivery information about a cohort of over 1200 women giving birth in the UK identified from the same hospitals as infected women. This pragmatic approach has been adopted to allow risk factors for severe outcomes of pandemic influenza or novel coronavirus to be identified while minimizing the data collection burden on reporting clinicians during the pandemic.

Data gathering:
On receiving a case report, the central team will dispatch a data collection form to the clinician. The data collection form will seek confirmation of the appropriate case definition and additional information on risk factors, management and outcomes. Cases will be allocated central UKOSS identification numbers. No names, addresses, dates of birth, hospital or NHS numbers will be sought. respondents will be asked only to record the unique identification number in order to facilitate elimination of duplicate reports. If a completed data collection form is not received back by the central team after 3 weeks, a further form will be sent out. If there is still no response after a further 3 weeks, the clinicians will be contacted by telephone. If a data collection form is received back indicating that the women has not yet delivered, the clinician will be sent a second identical data collection form after the estimated date of delivery and asked to complete further details of delivery and outcomes.

Monitoring data collection & analyses:
The response rate from reporting clinicians will be monitored throughout the course of the study, as part of the routine operation of UKOSS. On a monthly basis throughout the study, incidence data with 95% confidence intervals will be calculated and outcomes of pregnancy explored.

Consultation:
The research design and protocol has been discussed by the Steering Committee of the UK Obstetric Surveillance System, which includes both lay and professional representatives.

Timetable - activation phase:
Week 1: Study information mailed/emailed to clinicians
Week 3: Data collection commenced
Months 2-6: Ongoing reporting of new cases, data analysis, production of management guidance and dissemination
Months 7-10: Collection of remaining pregnancy outcome data
Month 12: Final pregnancy outcome analysis, production of guidance and dissemination
Intervention typeMixed
Primary outcome measureIncidence of pandemic COVID-19 in pregnancy assessed as proportion of pregnant women hospitalised with confirmed COVID-19 disease per 100,000 maternities during the study period
Secondary outcome measures1. Maternal death assessed using medical records from entry into the study until 6 weeks after giving birth or the end of pregnancy
2. Other major complication (critical care unit admission, receipt of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [ECMO], confirmed pneumonia on imaging) assessed using medical records from entry into the study until death or hospital discharge
3. Perinatal death assessed using medical records as proportion of babies of pregnant women hospitalised with confirmed COVID-19 who were stillborn at 24 weeks or greater gestation, or who died in the first 7 days of life, per 1000 total births
Overall study start date24/01/2020
Completion date31/03/2023

Eligibility

Participant type(s)Patient
Age groupAdult
SexFemale
Target number of participantsPlanned Sample Size: 500; UK Sample Size: 500
Total final enrolment427
Key inclusion criteria1. Any pregnant woman hospitalised who has tested positive for COVID-19 will be included.
2. Aged 16-45 years.
Key exclusion criteria1. Any woman not meeting the criteria.
Date of first enrolment20/03/2020
Date of final enrolment20/03/2022

Locations

Countries of recruitment

  • England
  • United Kingdom

Study participating centre

National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit
Nuffield Department of Population Health
University of Oxford
Old Rd Campus
Oxford
OX3 7LF
United Kingdom

Sponsor information

University of Oxford
University/education

Clinical Trials & Research Governance
Joint Research Office
Boundary Brook House
Churchill Drive
Oxford
OX3 7GB
United Kingdom

Phone +44 (0)1865 572224
Email heather.house@admin.ox.ac.uk
Website http://www.ox.ac.uk/
ROR logo "ROR" https://ror.org/052gg0110

Funders

Funder type

Government

National Institute for Health Research
Government organisation / National government
Alternative name(s)
National Institute for Health Research, NIHR Research, NIHRresearch, NIHR - National Institute for Health Research, NIHR (The National Institute for Health and Care Research), NIHR
Location
United Kingdom

Results and Publications

Intention to publish date31/12/2023
Individual participant data (IPD) Intention to shareYes
IPD sharing plan summaryAvailable on request
Publication and dissemination planNot provided at time of registration.
IPD sharing planThe datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study will be shared according to the NPEU data sharing policy https://www.npeu.ox.ac.uk/downloads/files/npeu/policies/Data%20Sharing%20Policy.pdf.

Study outputs

Output type Details Date created Date added Peer reviewed? Patient-facing?
Results article results 08/06/2020 10/06/2020 Yes No
Preprint results Impact of SARS-CoV-2 variant 25/07/2021 31/08/2021 No No
Interim results article comparison between outcomes collected in the periods in which wildtype, alpha variant, and delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 were dominant in the UK 19/01/2022 09/03/2022 Yes No
Interim results article population level data on risk factors, incidence and impact of SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnant women 05/05/2021 09/03/2022 Yes No
Interim results article secondary analysis of data 25/02/2022 09/03/2022 Yes No
Results article 24/08/2022 21/03/2023 Yes No
HRA research summary 28/06/2023 No No
Results article 15/04/2024 10/05/2024 Yes No

Editorial Notes

10/05/2024: Publication reference added.
21/03/2023: Publication reference added.
15/03/2023: Trial website added. The intention to publish date was changed from 31/03/2023 to 31/12/2023.
23/01/2023: Please note that 'UKOSS: Pandemic COVID-19 in pregnancy' (ISRCTN40092247) was added as an amendment to the existing 'Maternal and perinatal outcomes of pandemic influenza in pregnancy' study (ISRCTN44137563) under REC ref: 12/EM/0365.
09/01/2023: The ethics approval has been updated to clarify that the original ethics approval was for a surveillance study in pandemic influenza in pregnancy (ISRCTN44137563).
09/03/2022: The following changes have been made:
1. Publication references added.
2. The overall trial end date has been changed from 31/12/2022 to 31/03/2023 and the plain English summary has been updated to reflect this change.
3. The intention to publish date has been added.
20/09/2021: Internal review.
31/08/2021: Preprint reference added.
10/06/2020: added pub, added total final enrolment.
09/04/2020: Internal review.
27/03/2020: Trial's existence confirmed by the NIHR.