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The Etiology of Pneumonia in Zambian Children

Authors :
James Chipeta
Meredith Haddix
Phil Seidenberg
Somwe Wa Somwe
David R. Murdoch
Melissa M. Higdon
Christine Prosperi
Maria Deloria Knoll
James Mwansa
Justin M Mulindwa
Daniel R. Feikin
Lawrence Mwananyanda
Katherine L. O'Brien
Musaku Mwenechanya
Laura L. Hammitt
Donald M. Thea
Geoffrey Kwenda
Source :
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. 40:S40-S49
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

Background Childhood pneumonia in developing countries is the foremost cause of morbidity and death. Fresh information on etiology is needed, considering the changing epidemiology of pneumonia in the setting of greater availability of effective vaccines, changing antibiotic use and improved access to care. We report here the Zambia site results of the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health study on the etiology of pneumonia among HIV-uninfected children in Lusaka, Zambia. Methods We conducted a case-control study of HIV-uninfected children age 1-59 months admitted with World Health Organization-defined severe or very severe pneumonia to a large tertiary care hospital in Lusaka. History, physical examination, chest radiographs (CXRs), blood cultures and nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal swabs were obtained and tested by polymerase chain reaction and routine microbiology for the presence of 30 bacteria and viruses. From age and seasonally matched controls, we tested blood and nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal samples. We used the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health integrated analysis to determine the individual and population etiologic fraction for individual pathogens as the cause of pneumonia. Results Among the 514 HIV-uninfected case children, 208 (40.5%) had abnormal CXRs (61 of 514 children were missing CXR), 8 (3.8%) of which had positive blood cultures. The overall mortality was 16.0% (82 deaths). The etiologic fraction was highest for respiratory syncytial virus [26.1%, 95% credible interval (CrI): 17.0-37.7], Mycobacterium tuberculosis (12.8%, 95% CrI: 4.3-25.3) and human metapneumovirus (12.8%, CrI: 6.1-21.8). Conclusions Childhood pneumonia in Zambia among HIV-uninfected children is most frequently caused by respiratory syncytial virus, M. tuberculosis and human metapneumovirus, and the mortality remains high.

Details

ISSN :
08913668
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d26537b20d5cb04f721758df94dbd9f7