| Literature DB >> 31939387 |
Bratati Mukhopadhyay1, Dipika Sur1, Sanjukta Sen Gupta1, N K Ganguly1.
Abstract
Enteric fever is a common but serious disease that affects mostly children and adolescents in the developing countries. Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi remains responsible for most of the disease episodes; however, S. Paratyphi A has also been reported as an emerging infectious agent of concern. The control measures for the disease must encompass early diagnosis, surveillance and vaccine to protect against the disease. Sanitation and hygiene play a major role in reducing the burden of enteric diseases as well. The current status of diagnostics, the surveillance practices in the recent past and the vaccine development efforts have been taken into account for suggesting effective prevention and control measures. However, the challenges in all these aspects persist and cause hindrance in the implementation of the available tools. Hence, an integrative approach and a comprehensive policy framework are required to be in place for the prevention, control and elimination of typhoid fevers.Entities:
Keywords: Complications - diagnostics - enteric fever - surveillance system - typhoid fever - vaccines - WASH strategy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31939387 PMCID: PMC6977362 DOI: 10.4103/ijmr.IJMR_411_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Med Res ISSN: 0971-5916 Impact factor: 2.375
Current status of typhoid fever diagnostics
| Name of the diagnostics | Stage | Performance | Comments/challenges |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blood culture | Current gold standard for diagnosis | Sensitivity - 40-60% | 2-5 ml of blood required; sensitivity varies when bacterial levels are low; there is delay in transporting to the laboratory and if antibiotic is used before blood drawn; expensive; takes 48 h. Needs limited laboratory expertise and equipment. |
| Culture of bone marrow aspirate | The test may be attempted in case the blood culture for bacterial growth is negative following three to four days of incubation | Sensitivity - 90% | The procedure is extremely painful |
| Serological assay: The Felix-Widal test | Used in developing countries, despite low utility | Poorly sensitive or specific; often leads to misinterpretation of the results | Varying cost, disregarded as an effective diagnostic tool; false negatives are high in endemic areas; useful if combined with other tests |
| Rapid diagnostic tests (Typhidot with several variants as Typhidot, TyphiRapid-Tr02, Typhidot-M, | Available | Not remarkably sensitive or specific | Dismissed as appropriate diagnostics and treatment; expensive |
| Polymerase chain reaction-based assay | Available | 39-42% sensitive, 100% specific | Not a very reliable diagnostic; also requires high-end laboratory equipment along with technical expertise; cannot provide antimicrobial resistance status; no use in reporting |
| LAMP | Done in stimulated samples, and in human challenge model, needs validation | Able to detect 500 femtogram after serial dilutions of purified | Equipment and cost is high; temperature range (57-67°C) and 2 |
| MAMEF | Evaluation is underway | 1 cfu/ml of non- typhoidal | Amplification-free molecular method; more rapid |
| TPTest | Validated in a few countries | 100% sensitivity, 78-90% specificity | New-generation serologic test; both ELISA and Immunodot platforms available; incubation for 24-48 h is a limitation |
| Gas chromatography and time-of-flight mass spectrometry | Validated in plasma samples | Reports distinct systemic metabolite signatures to diagnose enteric fevers caused by | Expensive analytic tools |
| A portable iMC2 system | Validation stage; the system is already shown in buffer and blood samples spiked with | The method is highly sensitive (10 cfu/ml), and specific; turnaround time is fast (<7 h) | A lateral flow immunoassay detects the bacteria in the recovered sample Useful as rapid culture diagnosis |
| Strip-based typhoid diagnostics | Upscaling and validation stage | mAb to flagellin; specific to typhoid infection | Under validation |
LAMP, loop-mediated isothermal amplification; MAMEF, microwave-accelerated metal-enhanced fluorescence; TPTest, typhoid and paratyphoid fever test; mAb, monoclonal antibody; iMC2, immunomagnetic cell capture; S. Typhi, Salmonella Typhi; S. Paratyphi, Salmonella Paratyphi; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; cfu, colony-forming unit Source: Refs 10111213141516171819
List of available typhoid vaccines
| Characteristics | Parenteral killed whole cell vaccine | Live attenuated Ty21a | Vi capsular polysaccharide | Conjugated typhoid vaccine |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Constituent | Whole cell vaccine made from a non-motile mutant of | Chemically mutated Ty2 strain of | Purified Vi capsular polysaccharide of the Ty2 | Vi polysaccharide attached to a non-toxic recombinant protein which is antigenically similar to rEPA |
| Vaccine type | Whole cell, killed | Live attenuated | Subunit | Subunit |
| Immunogenic properties | Stimulate the synthesis of 0, H and Vi antibodies | Induces mucosal IgA and serum IgG antibodies against O, H and other antigens, also cell-mediated responses Not shown any booster effect | Elicits serum IgG Vi antibodies T cell-independent (no booster response) | T cell-dependent response Booster response seen on exposure |
| Administration route | Parenteral | Oral | Parenteral | Parenteral |
| Dosing schedule | 0.25 ml/dose for <10 yr 0.5 ml/dose for ≥10 yr Two doses; two-four week apart | Four doses; one capsule each on alternate days | A single intramuscular injection of 0.5 ml | Two doses; four weeks apart |
| Target population for licensure | ≥6 months of age | Adults and children more than six years of age | Adults and children more than two years of age | Six months and above |
| Safety | Local side effects such as pain, swelling, redness and systemic side effects such as high-grade fever, chills, headache, vomiting and body ache are seen in 30-50% vaccines | Major safety concerns not reported | Major safety concerns not reported | Major safety concerns not reported |
| Contraindication | Acute severe febrile illness | Acute severe febrile illness. Congenital or acquired immunodeficient state which includes treatment with immunosuppressive drugs; acute gastrointestinal illness Individuals receiving sulphonamides and antibiotics | Acute severe febrile illness | Acute severe febrile illness |
| Efficacy | ~70% for three years | 80% at five years; 62% at seven years | 64-77% | 92-99% |
| Length of protection | At least three years | At least five-seven years | At least three years | Three-year follow up ongoing |
P. aeruginosa, Pseudomonas aeruginosa; rEPA, recombinant exoprotein A; IgA, immunoglobulin A; IgG, immunoglobulin G Source: Ref 43