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Modeling Optimal Laboratory Testing Strategies for Bacterial Meningitis Surveillance in Africa

Authors :
Alpha Oumar Diallo
Lucy A McNamara
Heidi M Soeters
Clement Lingani
Rasmata Ouédraogo-Traoré
Ryan T. Novak
Brice Bicaba
Félix Tarbangdo
Jason M. Mwenda
Daugla Doumagoum Moto
Souleymane Coulibaly
Adodo Yao Sadji
Kadidja Gamougame
Assétou Y Dembélé
Ibrehima Guindo
Isaïe Medah
Maman Zaneidou
Haoua Tall
Katya Fernandez
Marietou F Paye
Jeni Vuong
Christelle Nikiema
Djibo Issifou
Issaka Yaméogo
Hamadi Assane
Andre Bita
Joseph W. Walker
Xin Wang
Guetwende Sawadogo
Source :
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Since 2010, the introduction of an effective serogroup A meningococcal conjugate vaccine has led to the near-elimination of invasive Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A disease in Africa’s meningitis belt. However, a significant burden of disease and epidemics due to other bacterial meningitis pathogens remain in the region. High-quality surveillance data with laboratory confirmation is important to monitor circulating bacterial meningitis pathogens and design appropriate interventions, but complete testing of all reported cases is often infeasible. Here, we use case-based surveillance data from 5 countries in the meningitis belt to determine how accurately estimates of the distribution of causative pathogens would represent the true distribution under different laboratory testing strategies. Detailed case-based surveillance data was collected by the MenAfriNet surveillance consortium in up to 3 seasons from participating districts in 5 countries. For each unique country-season pair, we simulated the accuracy of laboratory surveillance by repeatedly drawing subsets of tested cases and calculating the margin of error of the estimated proportion of cases caused by each pathogen (the greatest pathogen-specific absolute error in proportions between the subset and the full set of cases). Across the 12 country-season pairs analyzed, the 95% credible intervals around estimates of the proportion of cases caused by each pathogen had median widths of ±0.13, ±0.07, and ±0.05, respectively, when random samples of 25%, 50%, and 75% of cases were selected for testing. The level of geographic stratification in the sampling process did not meaningfully affect accuracy estimates. These findings can inform testing thresholds for laboratory surveillance programs in the meningitis belt.

Details

ISSN :
15376613 and 00221899
Volume :
224
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f947aa8b7d6d3a5f4ad46a1446ea1e69
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiab154