| Literature DB >> 31612938 |
Virginia E Pitzer1, James Meiring2, Frederick P Martineau3, Conall H Watson4,5, Gagandeep Kang6, Buddha Basnyat5,7, Stephen Baker8,9.
Abstract
Measuring the burden of typhoid fever and developing effective strategies to reduce it require a surveillance infrastructure that is currently lacking in many endemic countries. Recent efforts and partnerships between local and international researchers have helped to provide new data on the incidence and control of typhoid in parts of Asia and Africa. Here, we highlight examples from India, Nepal, Vietnam, Fiji, Sierra Leone, and Malawi that summarize past and present experiences with the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of typhoid fever in different locations with endemic disease. While there is no validated road map for the elimination of typhoid, the lessons learned in studying the epidemiology and control of typhoid in these settings can provide insights to guide future disease control efforts.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Salmonella Typhizzm321990 ; blood culture; enteric fever; paratyphoid; surveillance
Year: 2019 PMID: 31612938 PMCID: PMC6792124 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciz611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Successes and Challenges in Typhoid Fever Surveillance and Control in 6 Countries from Asia and Africa
| Country | Population in 2019a | Incidence of Typhoid Fever, per 100 000 Person-Yearsb | Successes in Typhoid Fever Surveillance and Control | Challenges Encountered With Typhoid Fever Surveillance and Control |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | 1.37 billion | 81–499 | Multiple hospital-based, laboratory-based, and population-based active surveillance studies have been conducted since the 1990s | Widespread availability of over-the-counter antimicrobials, leading to lower rates of formal healthcare-seeking, poor sensitivity of blood culture diagnosis, and selection pressure for the emergence of antimicrobial resistance |
| Nepal | 28.6 million | 113–436 | Conducted randomized controlled trials of treatment options and Vi-polysaccharide and Vi-conjugate vaccines | Other circulating pathogens that cause clinically indistinguishable disease (eg, typhus) lead to common misdiagnoses |
| Emergence of antimicrobial resistance | ||||
| Vietnam | 96.5 million | 60–149 | Economic reform led to improvements in infrastructure and decline in typhoid incidence | It is difficult to estimate the role of any single intervention in leading to the decline in typhoid fever incidence |
| Vi-polysaccharide vaccination campaigns were initiated and the first randomized controlled trial of Vi-conjugate vaccine was conducted | ||||
| Fiji | 890 000 | 21–100 | Recent case-control and serological studies have identified risk factors for infection and potential differences in reporting by age and among iTaukei and Indo-Fijians | Typhoid fever cases increased between 2004 and 2008, which may be due to better reporting |
| Sierra Leone | 7.81 million | 194–925 | Major investment in the Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response program following the 2014–2016 Ebola epidemic | Laboratory facilities necessary for blood culture testing are lacking |
| Most typhoid fever cases diagnosed using the Widal test (which has poor specificity) and/or based on clinical symptoms only | ||||
| Financial barriers to effective treatment due to limited antimicrobial supply | ||||
| Malawi | 18.6 million | 90–298 | Consistent hospital-based blood culture surveillance conducted since 1998 at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre | More than 10-fold increase in the incidence of typhoid fever following the emergence of the H58 haplotype and associated antimicrobial resistance in 2011 |
| First country in Africa to conduct a randomized controlled trial of Vi-conjugate vaccine |
aSource: United Nations World Population Prospects database (https://population.un.org/wpp/).
bThe range of the mean typhoid incidence estimate from 3 recent studies [1–3] is presented.