PURPOSE OF REVIEW: According to the WHO, lower respiratory tract infections are one of the most prevalent causes of death in Africa. Estimates based on verbal autopsies are inaccurate compared with the gold standard for determining cause of death, the anatomical postmortem. Here, we review all respiratory postmortem data available from Africa and assess disease prevalence by HIV status in both adults and children. RECENT FINDINGS: Pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis was detected in over 50% of HIV-infected adults, four to five-fold more prevalent than in HIV-uninfected cases. Overall tuberculosis was less prevalent in children, but was more prevalent in HIV-uninfected compared with HIV-infected children. Bacterial pneumonia was more prevalent in children than adults and was relatively unaffected by HIV status. Pneumocystis jirovecci and human cytomegalovirus pneumonia were detected almost exclusively in HIV-infected mortalities, twice as prevalent in children as in adults. Coinfections were common and correlation with premortem clinical diagnoses was low. SUMMARY: Respiratory tract infections are important causes of mortality in Africa. Of the 21 reviewed studies, only four studies (all adults) were undertaken in the last decade. There is hence an urgent need for new postmortem studies to monitor cause of death in new and emerging patient groups, such as those on antiretroviral therapy and HIV exposed uninfected children.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: According to the WHO, lower respiratory tract infections are one of the most prevalent causes of death in Africa. Estimates based on verbal autopsies are inaccurate compared with the gold standard for determining cause of death, the anatomical postmortem. Here, we review all respiratory postmortem data available from Africa and assess disease prevalence by HIV status in both adults and children. RECENT FINDINGS: Pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis was detected in over 50% of HIV-infected adults, four to five-fold more prevalent than in HIV-uninfected cases. Overall tuberculosis was less prevalent in children, but was more prevalent in HIV-uninfected compared with HIV-infectedchildren. Bacterial pneumonia was more prevalent in children than adults and was relatively unaffected by HIV status. Pneumocystis jirovecci and human cytomegaloviruspneumonia were detected almost exclusively in HIV-infected mortalities, twice as prevalent in children as in adults. Coinfections were common and correlation with premortem clinical diagnoses was low. SUMMARY:Respiratory tract infections are important causes of mortality in Africa. Of the 21 reviewed studies, only four studies (all adults) were undertaken in the last decade. There is hence an urgent need for new postmortem studies to monitor cause of death in new and emerging patient groups, such as those on antiretroviral therapy and HIV exposed uninfected children.
Authors: Elisabetta Walters; Marieke Magrieta van der Zalm; Megan Palmer; Corné Bosch; Anne-Marie Demers; Heather Draper; Pierre Goussard; Hendrik Simon Schaaf; Sven Olaf Friedrich; Andrew Whitelaw; Robin Warren; Robert P Gie; Anneke C Hesseling Journal: Pediatr Infect Dis J Date: 2017-09 Impact factor: 2.129
Authors: Irene N Njuguna; Lisa M Cranmer; Anjuli D Wagner; Sylvia M LaCourse; Cyrus Mugo; Sarah Benki-Nugent; Barbra A Richardson; Joshua Stern; Elizabeth Maleche-Obimbo; Dalton C Wamalwa; Grace John-Stewart Journal: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Date: 2019-06-01 Impact factor: 3.731
Authors: Stephen M Graham; Charalambos Sismanidis; Heather J Menzies; Ben J Marais; Anne K Detjen; Robert E Black Journal: Lancet Date: 2014-03-24 Impact factor: 79.321
Authors: Lyle W Murray; Iman Satti; Jodi Meyerowitz; Matthew Jones; Christian B Willberg; James E Ussher; Dominique Goedhals; Jacob Hurst; Rodney E Phillips; Helen McShane; Cloete van Vuuren; John Frater Journal: J Infect Dis Date: 2018-05-05 Impact factor: 5.226