Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine Hamburg, Germany.
German Center for Infection Research, Hamburg-Borstel-Lübeck, Germany.
Clin Infect Dis. 2018 Jun 1;66(12):1838-1845. doi: 10.1093/cid/cix1120.
The epidemiology of pediatric febrile illness is shifting in sub-Saharan Africa, but malaria remains a major cause of childhood morbidity and mortality. The present study describes causes of febrile illness in hospitalized children in Ghana and aims to determine the burden of malaria coinfections and their association with parasite densities.
In a prospective study, children (aged ≥30 days and ≤15 years) with fever ≥38.0°C were recruited after admission to the pediatric ward of a primary hospital in Ghana. Malaria parasitemia was determined and blood, stool, urine, respiratory, and cerebrospinal fluid specimens were screened for parasitic, bacterial, and viral pathogens. Associations of Plasmodium densities with other pathogens were calculated.
From November 2013 to April 2015, 1238 children were enrolled from 4169 admissions. A clinical/microbiological diagnosis could be made in 1109/1238 (90%) patients, with Plasmodium parasitemia (n = 728/1238 [59%]) being predominant. This was followed by lower respiratory tract infections/pneumonia (n = 411/1238 [34%]; among detected pathogens most frequently Streptococcus pneumoniae, n = 192/299 [64%]), urinary tract infections (n = 218/1238 [18%]; Escherichia coli, n = 21/32 [66%]), gastrointestinal infections (n = 210 [17%]; rotavirus, n = 32/97 [33%]), and invasive bloodstream infections (n = 62 [5%]; Salmonella species, n = 47 [76%]). In Plasmodium-infected children the frequency of lower respiratory tract, gastrointestinal, and bloodstream infections increased with decreasing parasite densities.
In a hospital setting, the likelihood of comorbidity with a nonmalarial disease is inversely correlated with increasing blood levels of malaria parasites. Hence, parasite densities provide important information as an indicator for the probability of coinfection, in particular to guide antimicrobial medication.
在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,儿科发热性疾病的流行病学正在发生变化,但疟疾仍然是儿童发病率和死亡率的主要原因。本研究描述了加纳住院儿童发热性疾病的病因,并旨在确定疟疾合并感染的负担及其与寄生虫密度的关系。
在一项前瞻性研究中,在加纳一家初级医院儿科病房入院后,招募了发热≥38.0°C 的儿童(年龄≥30 天且≤15 岁)。检测疟疾寄生虫血症,并筛查血液、粪便、尿液、呼吸道和脑脊液标本中的寄生虫、细菌和病毒病原体。计算了疟原虫密度与其他病原体的相关性。
2013 年 11 月至 2015 年 4 月,从 4169 次入院中招募了 1238 名儿童。在 1238 名患者中的 1109 名(90%)可以做出临床/微生物学诊断,其中疟原虫血症(n=728/1238[59%])最为常见。其次是下呼吸道感染/肺炎(n=411/1238[34%];在检测到的病原体中,最常见的是肺炎链球菌,n=192/299[64%])、尿路感染(n=218/1238[18%];大肠杆菌,n=21/32[66%])、胃肠道感染(n=210/1238[17%];轮状病毒,n=32/97[33%])和侵袭性血流感染(n=62[5%];沙门氏菌属,n=47[76%])。在感染疟原虫的儿童中,随着寄生虫密度的降低,下呼吸道、胃肠道和血流感染的频率增加。
在医院环境中,合并非疟疾疾病的可能性与血液中疟原虫水平的升高呈负相关。因此,寄生虫密度提供了重要信息,作为合并感染的概率指标,特别是指导抗菌药物的使用。