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Diarrhoea, enteric pathogen detection and nutritional indicators among controls in the Global Enteric Multicenter Study, Kenya site: an opportunity to understand reference populations in case-control studies of diarrhoea.

Authors :
Berendes, D. M.
O'Reilly, C. E.
Kim, S.
Omore, R.
Ochieng, J. B.
Ayers, T.
Fagerli, K.
Farag, T. H.
Nasrin, D.
Panchalingam, S.
Nataro, J. P.
Kotloff, K. L.
Levine, M. M.
Oundo, J.
Laserson, K.
Breiman, R. F.
Mintz, E. D.
Source :
Epidemiology & Infection; Jan2019, Vol. 147, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 9p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Given the challenges in accurately identifying unexposed controls in case-control studies of diarrhoea, we examined diarrhoea incidence, subclinical enteric infections and growth stunting within a reference population in the Global Enteric Multicenter Study, Kenya site. Within 'control' children (0-59 months old without diarrhoea in the 7 days before enrolment, n = 2384), we examined surveys at enrolment and 60-day follow-up, stool at enrolment and a 14-day post-enrolment memory aid for diarrhoea incidence. At enrolment, 19% of controls had ⩾1 enteric pathogen associated with moderate-to-severe diarrhoea ('MSD pathogens') in stool; following enrolment, many reported diarrhoea (27% in 7 days, 39% in 14 days). Controls with and without reported diarrhoea had similar carriage of MSD pathogens at enrolment; however, controls reporting diarrhoea were more likely to report visiting a health facility for diarrhoea (27% vs. 7%) or fever (23% vs. 16%) at follow-up than controls without diarrhoea. Odds of stunting differed by both MSD and 'any' (including non-MSD pathogens) enteric pathogen carriage, but not diarrhoea, suggesting control classification may warrant modification when assessing long-term outcomes. High diarrhoea incidence following enrolment and prevalent carriage of enteric pathogens have implications for sequelae associated with subclinical enteric infections and for design and interpretation of case-control studies examining diarrhoea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09502688
Volume :
147
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Epidemiology & Infection
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133974181
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268818002972