From the Medical Research Council Unit, Basse, The Gambia.
Department of Paediatrics, University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2021 Sep 1;40(9S):S7-S17. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000002766.
Pneumonia remains the leading cause of death in young children globally. The changing epidemiology of pneumonia requires up-to-date data to guide both case management and prevention programs. The Gambia study site contributed a high child mortality, high pneumonia incidence, low HIV prevalence, Haemophilus influenzae type b and pneumococcal conjugate vaccines-vaccinated rural West African setting to the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) Study.
The PERCH study was a 7-country case-control study of the etiology of hospitalized severe pneumonia in children 1-59 months of age in low and middle-income countries. Culture and nucleic acid detection methods were used to test nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal swabs, blood, induced sputum and, in selected cases, lung or pleural fluid aspirates. Etiology was determined by integrating case and control data from multiple specimens using the PERCH integrated analysis based on Bayesian probabilistic methods.
At The Gambia study site, 638 cases of World Health Organization-defined severe and very severe pneumonia (286 of which were chest radiograph [CXR]-positive and HIV-negative) and 654 age-frequency matched controls were enrolled. Viral causes predominated overall (viral 58% vs. bacterial 28%), and of CXR-positive cases respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) accounted for 37%, Streptococcus pneumoniae 13% and parainfluenza was responsible for 9%. Nevertheless, among very severe cases bacterial causes dominated (77% bacterial vs. 11% viral), led by S. pneumoniae (41%); Mycobacterium tuberculosis, not included in "bacterial", accounted for 9%. 93% and 80% of controls ≥1 year of age were, respectively, fully vaccinated for age against Haemophilus influenzae and S. pneumoniae.
Viral causes, notably RSV, predominated in The Gambia overall, but bacterial causes dominated the severest cases. Efforts must continue to prevent disease by optimizing access to existing vaccines, and to develop new vaccines, notably against RSV. A continued emphasis on appropriate case management of severe pneumonia remains important.
肺炎仍然是全球导致儿童死亡的主要原因。肺炎不断变化的流行病学需要最新的数据来指导病例管理和预防计划。冈比亚研究点提供了一个高儿童死亡率、高肺炎发病率、低艾滋病毒流行率、流感嗜血杆菌 b 型和肺炎球菌结合疫苗接种的农村西非环境,用于肺炎病因学研究以促进儿童健康(PERCH)研究。
PERCH 研究是一项在中低收入国家对 1-59 个月龄住院严重肺炎儿童病因的 7 国病例对照研究。采用培养和核酸检测方法检测鼻咽/口咽拭子、血液、诱导痰,在选定的情况下,还检测肺或胸腔液抽吸物。病因学通过使用基于贝叶斯概率方法的 PERCH 综合分析,整合来自多个标本的病例和对照数据来确定。
在冈比亚研究点,共纳入了 638 例世界卫生组织定义的严重和非常严重肺炎病例(其中 286 例胸部 X 线检查 [CXR] 阳性且 HIV 阴性)和 654 例年龄频数匹配对照。病毒病因占主导地位(病毒 58%,细菌 28%),CXR 阳性病例中呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)占 37%,肺炎链球菌占 13%,副流感病毒占 9%。然而,在非常严重的病例中,细菌病因占主导地位(77%细菌,11%病毒),主要是肺炎链球菌(41%);未包括在“细菌”中的结核分枝杆菌占 9%。≥1 岁的 93%和 80%的对照者分别完全接种了针对流感嗜血杆菌和肺炎链球菌的年龄疫苗。
病毒病因,尤其是 RSV,在冈比亚总体上占主导地位,但细菌病因在最严重的病例中占主导地位。必须继续努力通过优化现有疫苗的获取来预防疾病,并开发新的疫苗,特别是针对 RSV 的疫苗。继续强调对严重肺炎的适当病例管理仍然很重要。