Literature DB >> 25091689

Intussusception in southern India: comparison of retrospective analysis and active surveillance.

Susan Jehangir1, Jacob John2, Sangeeth Rajkumar3, Betty Mani4, Rajan Srinivasan3, Gagandeep Kang5.   

Abstract

Surveillance for intussusception is a post marketing requirement for rotavirus vaccines following observation of a small increased risk of intussusception after rotavirus vaccination in some global settings. This study presents the clinical presentation and outcomes of children who presented with intussusception at a large tertiary care facility directly (non-surveillance) as retrospective analysis of a period where rotavirus vaccine was not in routine use, or as part of active surveillance in a phase III oral rotavirus vaccine trial. Hospital records of children under 2 years of age treated for intussusception between 1 January 2010 and 31 August 2013 at the Christian Medical College Hospital, Vellore, India, were reviewed. Sixty-one cases of intussusception in children under two years of age presented at the hospital. An additional 16 cases of ultrasound diagnosed intussusception were identified through the active surveillance of a cohort of 1500 children participating in a rotavirus phase III trial in the same period. In the nonsurveillance group, median age at presentation was 214 days (IQR 153-321) with 52 events (85.3%) occurring in the first year of life. Cases were seen year-round with no definitive evidence of seasonality. Thirty-one (50.8%) intussusceptions required surgical reduction, 26 (42.6%) had pneumatic reduction and 2 (3.3%) barium enema reduction. Two intussusceptions (3.3%) resolved spontaneously. There were no deaths, all children were discharged after recovery. Active surveillance identified 16 children with a median age at event of 375 days (IQR 248-574). Nine (56%) children had small bowel or transient intussusception that resolved spontaneously. Seven intussusceptions were reduced radiologically; none required surgery. In summary, there were significant differences between presentation and outcomes in cases of intussusception identified by passive and active surveillance, likely related to enhanced and early detection of intussusception through active monitoring in the trial. The WHO recommendation of sentinel hospital based surveillance for post-marketing surveillance after rotavirus vaccine introduction is likely to a better approach than active surveillance.
Copyright © 2014. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Active surveillance; Children; India; Intussusception; Passive surveillance; Rotavirus vaccine

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25091689     DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2014.03.028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vaccine        ISSN: 0264-410X            Impact factor:   3.641


  4 in total

1.  Intussusception in Young Children: Protocol for Multisite Hospital Sentinel Surveillance in India.

Authors:  Manoja Kumar Das; Narendra Kumar Arora; Jan Bonhoeffer; Patrick L F Zuber; Christine G Maure
Journal:  Methods Protoc       Date:  2018-03-22

2.  Intussusception in children aged under two years in India: Retrospective surveillance at nineteen tertiary care hospitals.

Authors:  Manoja Kumar Das; Narendra Kumar Arora; Bini Gupta; Apoorva Sharan; K Kameswari; P Padmalatha; G Rajendra Prasad; Jimmy Shad; J Shyamala; S Harish Kumar; Yoga Nagender; K Sharmila; Rashmi Shad; Saurabh Garge; Lalit Bharadia; Atul Gupta; Jayanta K Goswami; Kaushik Lahiri; Lalit Sankhe; Sushant Mane; Yogini Prasad Patwari; M K Ajayakumar; A Santhosh Kumar; Rachita Sarangi; Bikasha Bihary Tripathy; S S G Mohapatra; Subrat Kumar Sahoo; Vijayendra Kumar; Rakesh Kumar; Suman Sarkar; Ruchirendu Sarkar; Nihar Ranjan Sarkar; Ashish Wakhlu; Simmi K Ratan; Anand P Dubey; Neelam Mohan; Meera Luthra; Bhadresh R Vyas; Harsh Trivedi; John Mathai; Cenita J Sam; K Jothilakshmi; Pavai Arunachalam; Javeed Iqbal Bhat; Gowhar Mufti; Bashir Ahmad Charoo; Pradeep K Jena; Sanjib K Debbarma; Sunil K Ghosh; Mahesh K Aggarwal; Pradeep Haldar; Patrick L F Zuber; Christine Maure; Jan Bonhoeffer; Arindam Ray
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2020-06-15       Impact factor: 3.641

3.  Analysis of hospitalizations due to intussusception in Sicily in the pre-rotavirus vaccination era (2003-2012).

Authors:  Claudio Costantino; Vincenzo Restivo; Mario Cuccia; Roberto Furnari; Emanuele Amodio; Francesco Vitale
Journal:  Ital J Pediatr       Date:  2015-08-01       Impact factor: 2.638

4.  Prospective surveillance for intussusception in Indian children aged under two years at nineteen tertiary care hospitals.

Authors: 
Journal:  BMC Pediatr       Date:  2020-09-01       Impact factor: 2.125

  4 in total

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