| Literature DB >> 34548898 |
Evans Mwila Mpabalwani1,2, Bruce Bvulani3, Julia Simwaka4, Pearson Chitambala3, Belem Matapo5, Jacqueline Tate5, Umesh Parashar6, Jason Mwenda5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: recipients of monovalent rotavirus vaccine have a low risk of developing intussusception (IS) in high- to medium-high-income countries. In sub-Saharan Africa, Zambia included, this risk of IS has not been assessed. Two-dose monovalent rotavirus vaccine, introduced in Zambia in 2012 in the capital of Lusaka, and rolled out countrywide in 2013, is administered at 6 and 10 weeks of age with no catch-up dose. Active IS surveillance monitoring in children < 2 years has been ongoing in Zambia since July 2009 and additional retrospective review was conducted from 2007- June 2009.Entities:
Keywords: CFR; Intussusception; Zambia; surveillance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34548898 PMCID: PMC8437426 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2021.39.1.26671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
surveillance sites and sociodemographic characteristics of children < 2 years with intussusception in Zambia, 2007-2018
| Parameter | Medical record search 2007-June 2009 n/N (%) | Prospective cases July 2009-2018 n/N (%) | N= 248 n/N (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surveillance sites | ||||
| Arthur Davison Children´s Teaching Hospital, Ndola | 11 (10.9) | 24 (16.3) | 35/248(14.1) | |
| Kitwe Teaching Hospital | 6 (5.9) | 14 (9.5) | 20/248(8.1) | |
| Livingstone Teaching Hospital | 8 (7.9) | 10 (6.8) | 18/248(7.3) | |
| University Teaching Hospital, Lusaka | 67 (66.3) | 94 (63.9) | 161/248(64.9) | |
| Others | 9 (8.9) | 5 (3.4) | 14/248(5.6) | |
|
| 101 | 147 | ||
|
| 6 months [1-36] | |||
|
|
| All | ||
| 0-2 months | 9/212(4) | 9/248(3.6) | ||
| 3-5 months | 84/212(39.6) | 84/248(33.9) | ||
| 6-8 months | 92/212(43.4) | 92/248(36.1) | ||
| 9-11 months | 27/212(12.7) | 27/248(10.9) | ||
| Total infants | - | 212/248(85.5) | ||
| 12-17 months | 18/248(7.3) | |||
| 18-23 months | 6/248(2.4) | |||
| ≥24 months | 7/248(2.8) | |||
| Missing data | 5/248(2.0) | |||
|
| 142 (57.3%) | |||
|
| 59 (51.3%) | |||
|
| 2 days | |||
*2013-18 data
Figure 1intussusception cases from nine sentinel surveillance Zambian Hospitals, 2007-2018
diagnosis, treatment and outcome of children < 2 years with intussusception in Zambia, 2007-2018
| Diagnosis of intussusception** | n / N(%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical symptoms | 13/242(5.4) | |
| Enema | 0 | |
| Radiographic X-ray | 56/242(23.1) | |
| Ultrasound | 19/242(7.9) | |
| Surgery | 154/242(63.6) | |
| Missing data | 6 | |
| Treatment of Intussusception | ||
| Enema | 1/245 (0.0) | |
| Surgery | 232/245(94.7) | |
| Spontaneous resolution | 12/245(0.05) | |
| Missing data | 3 | |
| Among children with surgery, n (%) that required resection | 108/232(46.6) | |
| Median length of hospital-stay in days - interquartile range (IQR) (n=248) | 8 [ | |
| Median length of hospital-stay in those with resection [IQR] (n=108) | 9 [ | |
| Outcome | Discharged home | 176/232(75.9) |
| Transferred | 0 | |
| Died (CFR) | 54/230(23.3) | |
| Missing data | 18 | |
**Diagnostic categories not mutually exclusive; multiple pieces of information could contribute to diagnosis
Figure 2monthly distribution of children < 2 years admitted with intussusception in the surveillance sites in Zambia, 2007-2018