| Literature DB >> 32503450 |
Claire Biribawa1, Joselyn Annet Atuhairwe2, Lilian Bulage2, Denis Othuba Okethwangu2, Benon Kwesiga2, Alex Riolexus Ario2,3, Bao-Ping Zhu4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Measles is a highly infectious viral disease. In August 2017, Lyantonde District, Uganda reported a measles outbreak to Uganda Ministry of Health. We investigated the outbreak to assess the scope, factors facilitating transmission, and recommend control measures.Entities:
Keywords: Global health security; Nosocomial infection; Pediatric measles outbreak; Vaccination-coverage; Vaccine-effectiveness
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32503450 PMCID: PMC7274507 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-020-05120-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Epidemic curve of 79 measles cases showing the number of cases by week of fever onset during an outbreak: Lyantonde, Lwengo and Rakai districts, Uganda, June–September 2017
Measles attack rate by age and sex during an outbreak: Lyantonde, Lwengo and Rakai districts, June–September 2017
| Characteristics | Population | Num. of cases | AR (/100,000) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall (three districts) | 926,000 | 81 | 8.7 |
| District | |||
| Lyantonde | 101,200 | 55 | 54 |
| Rakai | 543,400 | 16 | 2.9 |
| Lwengo | 281,400 | 10 | 3.6 |
| Age group | |||
| < 9 m | 35,610 | 6 | 17 |
| 9 m–5y | 158,320 | 50 | 32 |
| 6–18y | 336,930 | 21 | 06.2 |
| ≥ 18y | 395,140 | 4 | 1.01 |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 457,100 | 37 | 8.1 |
| Female | 468,900 | 44 | 9.4 |
Fig. 2Attack rate (per 10,000) by sub-county during a measles outbreak: Lyantonde, Lwengo and Rakai districts, Uganda, June–September 2017
Association between measles and exposures during an outbreak: Lyantonde, Lwengo and Rakai districts, Uganda, June–September 2017
| Exposurea | % cases | % controls | OR b (95% CI) | ORadjc (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exposures during case-patient’s likely exposure periodd | ||||
| Hospitalized at pediatric department, Lyantonde Hospital | 47 | 2.3 | 30 (7.0–132) | 34 (5.1–225) |
| Visited any health facility | 59 | 36 | 2.6 (1.2–5.5) | |
| Went to communal water point | 12 | 39 | 0.14 (0.039–0.51) | 0.056 (0.0066–0.47) |
| Went to church | 38 | 61 | 0.36 (0.16–0.81) | |
| Went to school | 47 | 41 | 1.4 (0.55–3.6) | |
| History of measles vaccination | 26 | 76 | 0.11 (0.043–0.27) | 0.051 (0.011–0.25) |
aSome records had missing values for exposure variables, including 4 for “hospitalized at pediatric department, Lyantonde Hospital”, 1 for “went to communal water point”, 2 for “went to church”, and 2 for “went to school”. These records were excluded from the respective analysis
bOR = Crude odds ratios from univariate conditional logistic regression analysis, in which the matching variable was the case-control set
cORadj = Odds ratios from multivariable conditional logistic regression
dCase-patient’s likely exposure period = 7–21 days (minimum-to-maximum incubation periods) before case-patient’s rash onset
Measles vaccination coverage by age during an outbreak: Lyantonde, Lwengo and Rakai districts, Uganda, June–September 2017
| Age (years) | Vaccination Coverage (%)a | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 76 (101/134) | 68–82 |
| 9–12 months | 86(12/14) | 52–98 |
| 9 months-5y | 72 (64/90) | 62–80 |
| 6-18y | 77(29/38) | 60–89 |
| >18y | 83(5/6) | 41–99 |
aEstimated based on the percent of controls in the case-control study who have been vaccinated
Fig. 3Layout of the pediatric department at Lyantonde Hospital during a measles outbreak: Lyantonde District, Uganda, June–September 2017