| Literature DB >> 32699131 |
Heidi Hopkins1, Quique Bassat2,3,4,5, Clare Ir Chandler6, John A Crump7, Nicholas A Feasey8,9, Rashida A Ferrand10,11, Katharina Kranzer10,11,12, David G Lalloo13, Mayfong Mayxay14,15, Paul N Newton10,14,16, David Mabey10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Fever commonly leads to healthcare seeking and hospital admission in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. There is only limited guidance for clinicians managing non-malarial fevers, which often results in inappropriate treatment for patients. Furthermore, there is little evidence for estimates of disease burden, or to guide empirical therapy, control measures, resource allocation, prioritisation of clinical diagnostics or antimicrobial stewardship. The Febrile Illness Evaluation in a Broad Range of Endemicities (FIEBRE) study seeks to address these information gaps. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: FIEBRE investigates febrile illness in paediatric and adult outpatients and inpatients using standardised clinical, laboratory and social science protocols over a minimum 12-month period at five sites in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeastern and Southern Asia. Patients presenting with fever are enrolled and provide clinical data, pharyngeal swabs and a venous blood sample; selected participants also provide a urine sample. Laboratory assessments target infections that are treatable and/or preventable. Selected point-of-care tests, as well as blood and urine cultures and antimicrobial susceptibility testing, are performed on site. On day 28, patients provide a second venous blood sample for serology and information on clinical outcome. Further diagnostic assays are performed at international reference laboratories. Blood and pharyngeal samples from matched community controls enable calculation of AFs, and surveys of treatment seeking allow estimation of the incidence of common infections. Additional assays detect markers that may differentiate bacterial from non-bacterial causes of illness and/or prognosticate illness severity. Social science research on antimicrobial use will inform future recommendations for fever case management. Residual samples from participants are stored for future use. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval was obtained from all relevant institutional and national committees; written informed consent is obtained from all participants or parents/guardians. Final results will be shared with participating communities, and in open-access journals and other scientific fora. Study documents are available online (https://doi.org/10.17037/PUBS.04652739). © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: diagnostic microbiology; epidemiology; infectious diseases; public health; tropical medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32699131 PMCID: PMC7375419 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Characteristics of the study sites for the Febrile Illness Evaluation in a Broad Range of Endemicities
| Bangladesh | Lao People’s Democratic Republic | Malawi | Mozambique | Zimbabwe | |
| Site-specific ethics committees* | Bangladesh Medical Research Council National Research Ethics Committee, Chittagong Medical College Ethical Review Committee, Oxford Tropical Research Committee† | National Ethics Committee for Health Research, Oxford Tropical Research Ethics Committee† | University of Malawi College of Medicine Research and Ethics Committee, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine Research Ethics Committee† | Comité Institucional de Bioética para a Saúde do Centro de Investigação em Saúde de Manhiça, Comité Nacional de Bioética em Saúde de Moçambique | Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe |
| Name of health facilities where patients are recruited | CMCH and Bangladesh Institute of Tropical and Infectious Diseases | Phonhong Vientiane Provincial Hospital | Chikwawa District Hospital | Manhiça District Hospital | Harare Central Hospital, Chitungwiza General Hospital and three primary care clinics in Harare City |
| Region of country | Southeast | Northwest | South | South | North central |
| Demographic classification | Urban, periurban and rural | Periurban and rural | Rural | Rural | Urban |
| HIV epidemiology (2018 national seroprevalence among adults aged 15–49 years‡ unless otherwise indicated) | <0.1% | 0.3%, no site-specific estimates available | 9.2%, no site-specific estimates available | 12.6%, | 12.7%, |
| Malaria epidemiology | Low transmission of | Low transmission of | Perennial transmission of | Perennial transmission of | No local malaria transmission; Harare health facilities may receive malaria-infected patients referred or visiting from endemic areas of Zimbabwe¶¶ |
*All implemented versions of the protocol are approved by the site-specific ethics committee/s for each site and by the research and ethics committee of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.
†Oxford Tropical Research Ethics Committee and Liverpool School for Tropical Medicine Research Ethics Committee have reciprocal agreements for protocol review and approval with the research and ethics committee of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.
‡UNAIDS AIDSinfo Data Sheet, 2018 national data (and subnational data for Zimbabwe) (http://aidsinfo.unaids.org/).
§González R, et al ‘HIV incidence and spatial clustering in a rural area of southern Mozambique,’PLoS One, 2015 Jul 6;10(7):e0132053.
¶Reported in Mayxay et al. 2
**Kabaghe AN, et al., ‘Short-term changes in anaemia and malaria parasite prevalence in children under 5 years during 1 year of repeated cross-sectional surveys in rural Malawi.’ Am J Trop Med Hyg, 97(5), 2017, pp. 1568–1575, doi:10.4269/ajtmh.17–0335.
††Personal communication, Quique Bassat.
‡‡US President’s Malaria Initiative Malaria Operational Plan for Zimbabwe, fiscal year 2017.
§§Noé A, et al‘Mapping the stability of malaria hotspots in Bangladesh from 2013 to 2016,’Mal J, 2018; 17:259–79
¶¶Personal communication, Chittagong Medical College Hospital, Malaria Research Group, Chattogram, Bangladesh.
CMCH, Chittagong Medical College Hospital.
Pathogen-based diagnostic testing for the Febrile Illness Evaluation in a Broad Range of Endemicities (FIEBRE)
| Infection or pathogen sought | Sample type | Diagnostic test | Notes |
| Pathogen-based diagnostic tests to be performed at or near the point of care | |||
| Malaria ( | EDTA whole blood | Antigen-detecting lateral flow malaria rapid diagnostic test (mRDT) | Combination test detects histidine-rich protein 2 and |
| Thick and thin blood smear | Expert light microscopy for the presence versus the absence of asexual parasites, species and density | For all mRDT-positive samples and 10% of mRDT-negative samples | |
| HIV* | EDTA whole blood | Antibody-detecting rapid tests according to national guidelines | Confirmatory molecular testing according to national guidelines for infants who test antibody-positive |
| Bacteraemia and/or fungaemia | Whole blood | Aerobic culture, identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing performed for isolated microorganisms | Single culture bottle; blood volume of ≤10 mL, weight-based volumes for small children |
| Mycobacteraemia* | Whole blood | Mycobacterial culture | For patients aged ≥15 years who are HIV-infected and/or admitted as inpatients |
| | Urine | Urinary lipoarabinomannan rapid test | For patients who are HIV-infected and/or admitted as inpatients |
| | Serum | Antigen-detecting lateral flow rapid diagnostic test | For patients who are HIV-infected and/or admitted as inpatients |
| Nitrites and leucocyte esterase (evidence of urinary tract infection) | Urine | Urine dipstick | Urine culture performed on samples positive for nitrites and/or leucocyte esterase |
| Bacteriuria | Urine | Culture, identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing performed for isolated microorganisms | For samples dipstick-positive for nitrites and/or leucocyte esterase |
| External quality assessment of diagnostic results obtained at or near the point of care, to be performed at internationally recognised reference laboratories | |||
| Malaria ( | Thick and thin blood smear | Expert light microscopy for the presence versus the absence of asexual parasites, species and density | Randomly selected sample of 10% of microscopy-positive and 10% of microscopy-negative smears from each site |
| Bacteria and fungi isolated from blood and urine at sites | Cryopreserved isolates | MALDI-TOF MS for identification and drug susceptibility testing to EUCAST standards | – |
| Mycobacteria isolated from blood at sites | Cryopreserved isolates | Identification using subculture and molecular testing, drug susceptibility testing depending on organisms identified | – |
| Pathogen-based diagnostic tests to be performed at internationally recognised reference laboratories | |||
| | Thick and thin blood smear | Expert light microscopy | Random 10% sample of all smears from each site; if positives are identified, a larger proportion are to be read |
| Arboviruses: chikungunya, dengue, Japanese encephalitis, o’nyong ‘nyong, Zika | Serum | Africa-specific or Asia-specific IgG ELISA and qPCR, microneutralisation for samples positive by ELISA | A proportion of African samples to be tested for Japanese encephalitis virus, and a proportion of Asian samples to be tested for o’nyong ‘nyong virus; if positives are identified, a larger proportion of samples are to be tested |
| | Serum | Brucella IgM EIA, | Convalescent sera screened for exposure using EIA; positives tested by IgM EIA and microagglutination on acute and convalescent sera |
| | Serum | Microagglutination test | – |
| Rickettsiae: | Serum and buffy coat | IgG and IgM IFA; qPCRfor samples positive by serological screen | Buffy coat is preferred sample for |
| Visceral leishmaniasis | Serum | Direct agglutination test | – |
| | Serum | Histoplasma EIA†† | – |
| Respiratory pathogens: influenza A and B, respiratory syncytial virus† | Nasopharyngeal±oropharyngeal swab | Luminex respiratory panel | – |
| Paediatric viraemia and/or bacteraemia‡ | EDTA whole blood | PCR | (Details to be determined) |
*At sites where HIV prevalence is >1% in the general adult population.
†The Luminex respiratory panel also detects adenovirus, parainfluenza viruses 1–4, enterovirus, rhinovirus, B virus, coronaviruses (229E, OC43, HKu1 and NL63), metapneumovirus, bocavirus, Legionella pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae and Mycoplasma pneumoniae.
‡To be performed on samples from children aged <5 years, from whom blood volumes will not be adequate for all serology tests listed.
EIA, enzyme immunoassay; EUCAST, European Committee of Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing; IFA, immunofluorescence assay; MALDI-TOF MS, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation time-of-flight mass spectrometry; mRDT, malaria rapid diagnostic test; qPCR, quantitative PCR.