Agence de Médecine Préventive, Paris, France.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2011 Mar;11(3):223-35. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(11)70008-1.
Acute respiratory infection (ARI) is a leading cause of mortality worldwide, of which influenza is an important cause that can be prevented with vaccination. We did a systematic review of research published from 1980 to 2009 on seasonal influenza epidemiology in sub-Saharan Africa to identify data strengths and weaknesses that might affect policy decisions, to assess the state of knowledge on influenza disease burden, and to ascertain unique features of influenza epidemiology in the region. We assessed 1203 papers, reviewed 104, and included 49 articles. 1-25% of outpatient ARI visits were caused by influenza (11 studies; mean 9·5%; median 10%), whereas 0·6-15·6% of children admitted to hospital for ARI had influenza identified (15 studies; mean 6·6%; median 6·3%). Influenza was highly seasonal in southern Africa. Other data were often absent, particularly direct measurement of influenza incidence rates for all ages, within different patient settings (outpatient, inpatient, community), and for all countries. Data from sub-Saharan Africa are insufficient to allow most countries to prioritise strategies for influenza prevention and control. Key data gaps include incidence and case-fatality ratios for all ages, the contribution of influenza towards admission of adults to hospital for ARI, representative seasonality data, economic burden, and the interaction of influenza with prevalent disorders in Africa, such as malaria, HIV, and malnutrition.
急性呼吸道感染(ARI)是全球范围内导致死亡的主要原因之一,其中流感是可以通过疫苗预防的重要病因。我们对 1980 年至 2009 年间在撒哈拉以南非洲开展的季节性流感流行病学研究进行了系统综述,以确定可能影响政策决策的研究数据的优势和劣势,评估对流感疾病负担的了解程度,并确定该地区流感流行病学的独特特征。我们评估了 1203 篇论文,综述了 104 篇,并纳入了 49 篇文章。11 项研究显示,门诊急性呼吸道感染就诊者中有 1-25%是由流感引起的(平均 9·5%,中位数 10%),15 项研究显示,因急性呼吸道感染住院的儿童中有 0·6-15·6%是由流感引起的(平均 6·6%,中位数 6·3%)。南部非洲的流感具有高度季节性。其他数据通常也不存在,特别是在不同患者群体(门诊、住院、社区)和所有国家中,对所有年龄组的流感发病率进行直接测量的数据。撒哈拉以南非洲的数据不足以让大多数国家对流感预防和控制策略进行优先排序。关键的数据差距包括所有年龄组的发病率和病死率、流感对成人因急性呼吸道感染住院的影响、有代表性的季节性数据、经济负担,以及流感与非洲常见疾病(如疟疾、艾滋病毒和营养不良)之间的相互作用。