Child Health and Development Centre, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Kampala, Uganda.
BMC Infect Dis. 2020 Jul 13;20(1):503. doi: 10.1186/s12879-020-05215-z.
Understanding the relationship between malaria infection risk and disease outcomes represents a fundamental component of morbidity and mortality burden estimations. Contemporary data on severe malaria risks among populations of different parasite exposures are scarce. Using surveillance data, we compared rates of paediatric malaria hospitalisation in areas of varying parasite exposure levels.
Surveillance data at five public hospitals; Jinja, Mubende, Kabale, Tororo, and Apac were assembled among admissions aged 1 month to 14 years between 2017 and 2018. The address of each admission was used to define a local catchment population where national census data was used to define person-year-exposure to risk. Within each catchment, historical infection prevalence was assembled from previously published data and current infection prevalence defined using 33 population-based school surveys among 3400 children. Poisson regression was used to compute the overall and site-specific incidences with 95% confidence intervals.
Both current and historical Plasmodium falciparum prevalence varied across the five sites. Current prevalence ranged from < 1% in Kabale to 54% in Apac. Overall, the malaria admission incidence rate (IR) was 7.3 per 1000 person years among children aged 1 month to 14 years of age (95% CI: 7.0, 7.7). The lowest rate was described at Kabale (IR = 0.3; 95 CI: 0.1, 0.6) and highest at Apac (IR = 20.3; 95 CI: 18.9, 21.8). There was a correlation between IR across the five sites and the current parasite prevalence in school children, though findings were not statistically significant. Across all sites, except Kabale, malaria admissions were concentrated among young children, 74% were under 5 years. The median age of malaria admissions at Kabale hospital was 40 months (IQR 20, 72), and at Apac hospital was 36 months (IQR 18, 69). Overall, severe anaemia (7.6%) was the most common presentation and unconsciousness (1.8%) the least common.
Malaria hospitalisation rates remain high in Uganda particularly among young children. The incidence of hospitalized malaria in different locations in Uganda appears to be influenced by past parasite exposure, immune acquisition, and current risks of infection. Interruption of transmission through vector control could influence age-specific severe malaria risk.
了解疟疾感染风险与疾病结局之间的关系是评估发病率和死亡率负担的基本组成部分。目前有关不同寄生虫暴露人群中严重疟疾风险的数据很少。本研究利用监测数据比较了不同寄生虫暴露水平地区的儿科疟疾住院率。
2017 年至 2018 年,我们汇集了金贾、姆布迪、卡巴莱、托罗罗和阿帕克的五家公立医院的监测数据,纳入年龄在 1 个月至 14 岁的住院患者。每个住院患者的地址用于定义一个当地的收容人群,使用全国人口普查数据来定义风险的人年暴露。在每个收容区,根据之前发表的数据来确定历史感染率,根据 3400 名儿童中进行的 33 次基于人群的学校调查来确定当前感染率。使用泊松回归计算总体和特定地点的发生率及其 95%置信区间。
五个地点的现患和既往间日疟原虫流行率均有所不同。现患率范围为卡巴莱<1%至阿帕克 54%。总体而言,1 个月至 14 岁儿童的疟疾住院发病率为 7.3/1000 人年(95%CI:7.0,7.7)。卡巴莱的发病率最低(IR=0.3;95%CI:0.1,0.6),阿帕克的发病率最高(IR=20.3;95%CI:18.9,21.8)。五个地点的发病率与在校儿童的当前寄生虫流行率之间存在相关性,但无统计学意义。除卡巴莱外,所有地点的疟疾住院治疗均集中在幼儿中,74%的患者年龄<5 岁。卡巴莱医院疟疾住院患者的中位年龄为 40 个月(IQR 20,72),阿帕克医院为 36 个月(IQR 18,69)。总体而言,最常见的表现是严重贫血(7.6%),最不常见的是意识丧失(1.8%)。
在乌干达,疟疾住院率仍然很高,特别是在幼儿中。乌干达不同地区疟疾住院率的发生似乎受到既往寄生虫暴露、免疫获得和当前感染风险的影响。通过病媒控制来阻断传播可能会影响特定年龄的严重疟疾风险。