Pregnancy Risk, Infant Surveillance, and Measurement Alliance (PRISMA) Maternal and Newborn Health Study: Protocol for a multisite, prospective, open cohort study of pregnancy and postpartum health outcomes in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa

  • Emily R. Smith
  • , Christopher N. Mores
  • , Qing Pan
  • , Jennifer Seager
  • , Sasha G. Baumann
  • , Jaime Marquis
  • , Christopher R. Sudfeld
  • , Zahra Hoodbhoy
  • , Muhammad Imran Nisar
  • , Fyezah Jehan
  • , Aneeta Hotwani
  • , Nida Yazdani
  • , Amna Khan
  • , Farzana Shaheen
  • , Kinza Farooqui
  • , Leena Chatterjee
  • , Arjun Dang
  • , Manavi Dang
  • , R. Venketeshwar
  • , Sarmila Mazumder
  • Neeraj Sharma, Arun Singh Jadaun, Rupa Talukdar, Blair J. Wylie, Victor Akelo, Winnie K. Mwebia, Joyce Were, Dickson Gethi, Zacchaeus Abaja, Gregory Ouma, Harun Owuor, Kephas Otieno, Anne George Cherian, Santosh Joseph Benjamin, Venkata Raghava Mohan, Balakrishnan Vijayalekshmi, Sunitha Varghese, Jasmine Sugirtha, Daniel Jebakumar, A. James, Margaret P. Kasaro, M. Bridget Spelke, Wilbroad Mutale, Felistas Mbewe, Humphrey Mwape, Bethany Freeman, Bellington Vwalika, Mutale Sampa, Kwaku Poku Asante, Sam Newton, Charlotte Tawiah Agyemang, Irene Apewe Adjei, Veronica Agyemang, Dennis Adu-Gyasi, Eliezer Odei-Lartey, Stephaney Gyaase, Laura M. Lamberti

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Introduction Maternal and child mortality has markedly decreased worldwide over the past few decades. Despite this success, the decline remains unequal across countries and is overall insufficient to meet the Sustainable Development Goals. South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa bear most of the burden of maternal and child morbidity and mortality. Major gaps persist in our understanding of the causes, timing, diagnostic thresholds and risk factors for adverse outcomes in these regions. Addressing these gaps requires new ways to prevent and treat disease, from novel diagnostics to precision public health strategies, all of which rely on high-quality clinical data from diverse populations. The Pregnancy Risk, Infant Surveillance, and Measurement Alliance (PRISMA) Maternal and Newborn Health Study aims to estimate population-level prevalence of morbidities and mortality and to assess biological, clinical and sociodemographic risk among mother-infant pairs in India, Pakistan, Kenya, Ghana and Zambia. Methods and analysis This study is a prospective, open cohort study with a planned recruitment of about 6000 women annually across six research sites in five countries. Participants are pregnant women enrolled less than 20 weeks gestation, as determined by ultrasound, identified through active house-to-house and facility-based surveillance. Robust clinical data will be collected at 12 scheduled study visits during antenatal care, labour and delivery, and through 1 year postpartum. A total of 34 outcomes will be captured. The primary analysis will estimate the burden of adverse outcomes and examine associated risk factors to inform future intervention strategies. Data will also be used to develop normative values for pregnant and postpartum women, as well as predictive models to assess pregnancy risk. Ethics and dissemination PRISMA received institutional and national ethical approvals. Findings will be published in peer-reviewed open-access journals and disseminated at national and international forums to inform clinical guidelines and public health practice.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere104512
JournalBMJ Open
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Jan 2026

Keywords

  • Fetal medicine
  • Maternal medicine
  • Postpartum Period
  • Pregnancy
  • Protocols & guidelines

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