| Literature DB >> 31641571 |
Antonia Ho1,2.
Abstract
Community-acquired pneumonia causes substantial morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa with an estimated 131 million new cases each year. Viruses - such as influenza virus, respiratory syncytial virus and parainfluenza virus - are now recognised as important causes of respiratory disease in older children and adults in the developed world following the emergence of sensitive molecular diagnostic tests, recent severe viral epidemics, and the discovery of novel viruses. Few studies have comprehensively evaluated the viral aetiology of adult pneumonia in Africa, but it is likely to differ from Western settings due to varying seasonality and the high proportion of patients with immunosuppression and co-morbidities. Emerging data suggest a high prevalence of viral pathogens, as well as multiple viral and viral/bacterial infections in African adults with pneumonia. However, the interpretation of positive results from highly sensitive polymerase chain reaction tests can be challenging. Therapeutic and preventative options against viral respiratory infections are currently limited in the African setting. This review summarises the current state of the epidemiology, aetiology, diagnosis and management of viral pneumonia in sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; adult; older children; sub-Saharan Africa; viral pneumonia; viral respiratory tract infections
Year: 2014 PMID: 31641571 PMCID: PMC5922328 DOI: 10.15172/pneu.2014.5/446
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pneumonia (Nathan) ISSN: 2200-6133
Figure 1Flow chart of identification and selection of studies that have evaluated viral aetiology of pneumonia in adults and older children in sub-Saharan Africa
Characteristics of studies on viral aetiology in hospitalised adults and older children with pneumonia or clinical lower respiratory tract infection in sub-Saharan Africa.
| Study, year [ ] Reference | Country | Study period | Setting | Study population | “Pneumonia” definition | Specimen | Viral diagnostic test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joosting et al., 1979 [ | South Africa | May 1966–Apr 1972 | Hospital-based observational study | Black miners | Acute respiratory disease (definition not stated) | Throat swabs & serum | Viral culture & serology (HAI or complement fixation) |
| Scott et al., 2000 [ | Kenya | Mar 1994–May 1996 | Hospital-based observational study | >15 years | Pneumonia (>2 symptoms of fever, cough, sputum, chest pain, SOB, or haemoptysis; symptoms <14 days; consolidation on CXR) | Serum | Complement fixation |
| Hartung et al., 2011 [ | Malawi | Feb 2006–Sept 2006 | Hospital-based observational study | >18 years | Pneumonia (>1 symptom of cough, sputum, chest pain, SOB, chest pain or haemoptysis; CXR changes) + admission to HDU | BAL fluid | rRT-PCR |
| Feikin et al., 2012 [ | Kenya | Mar 2007–Feb 2010 | Population-based surveillance | >5 years | ARI (cough or difficulty breathing or chest pain and temperature >38.0 °C or oxygen saturation <90% or hospitalisation) | NP & OP swabs | rRT-PCR |
| Pretorius et al., 2012 [ | South Africa | Feb 2009–Dec 2010 | Hospital-based surveillance (6 hospitals) | >5 years | SARI (fever; cough or sore throat; shortness of breath or difficulty breathing; symptoms <7 days) | NP & OP swabs | rRT-PCR |
HAI, haemaglutination inhibition assay; SOB, shortness of breath; CXR, chest radiograph (x-ray); HDU, high dependency unit; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; rRT-PCR, real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; ARI, acute respiratory infection; NP, nasopharyngeal; OP, oropharyngeal; SARI, severe acute respiratory infection.
Results of studies on viral aetiology in hospitalised adults and older children with acute lower respiratory tract infection or pneumonia in sub-Saharan Africa
| Study, year [ ] Reference | Patients ( | HIV-positive (%) | Virology result | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| >1 virus | Influenza virus | Adenovirus | Rhinovirus | PIV1-3 | RSV | hMPV | Other | |||
| Joosting et al., 1979a [ | 1012 | NS | 477 (47.1%) | Any: 384 (37.9%) A: 287 (28.4%) B: 87 (8.6%) C: 10(1.0%) | 45 (4.4%) | - | 17 (1.7%) | 8 (0.8%) | - | Enterovirus: 1 |
| Scott et al., 2000b [ | 281 | 52% | 16 (5.7%) | 5% A: 12 (4.3%) B: 2 (0.7%) | 2 (0.7%) | - | - | 0 | - | |
| Hartung et al., 2011c [ | 51 | 94% | 11 (21.6%) | A: 1 | 1 (9%) | 4 (36%)d | PIV1: 1 (9%) | 1 (9%) | Bocavirus: 1 (9%) Coronavirus NL63: 1 (9%); Coronavirus OC43: 1 (9%) | |
| Feikin et al., 2012e [ | 396f | 49% | 230 (58%) | Any: 37 (9%) A: 29 (7%) B: 8 (2%) | 29 (7%) | 39 (35%)h | PIV1: 2 (0.5%) PIV2: 6 (2.0%) PIV3: 14(4.0%) | 33 (8%) | 10 (3%) | |
| Pretorius et al., 2012i [ | 4006g | NS | 5–24 years: 51% 25–44 years: 33.8% 45–64 years: 28.7% >65 years: 24.2% | Any: 343 (8.6%) A(H3N2): 102 (2.5%) A(H1N1): 104 (2.6%) B: 137 (3.4%) | 251 (6.3%) | 653 (16%) | Any: 145 (3.4%) PIV1: 12 (0.3%) PIV2: 27 (0.7%) PIV3: 96 (2.4%) | 134 (3.3%) | 62 (1.5%) | Enterovirus: 63 (1.6%) |
HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; NS, not stated; PIV1-3, parainfluenza virus type 1 to 3; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; hMPV, human metapneumovirus.
aTested for Influenza A, B & C viruses, PIV1-3, RSV, adenovirus, herpesvirus, and enterovirus.
bTested for Influenza A & B viruses, adenovirus, and RSV.
cTested for Influenza A & B viruses, PIV1-4, adenovirus, rhinovirus, RSV type A & B, hMPV; Coronavirus 229E & OC43, human Coronavirus NL63, bocavirus.
d2 were co-infected with Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia; 1 with pulmonary Mycobacterium tuberculosis; 1 with pulmonary Kaposi’s sarcoma.
eTested for Influenza A & B viruses, PIV1-3, adenovirus, RSV, and hMPV (also rhinovirus, enterovirus and parechovirus from January 2009).
fOnly included hospitalised patients aged >5 years in whom naso/oropharngeal specimens taken.
gOnly included patients aged >5 years.
hInclude enterovirus due to cross-reactivity on real-time transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR).
iTested for Influenza A & B viruses, PIV1-3, adenovirus, RSV, hMPV, rhinovirus and enterovirus.