阿布贾儿童轮状病毒腹泻负担

B. Balarabe-Musa
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Children without diarrhoea were recruited as the control group. Faecal specimens were transported in cold chain boxes from Nigeria and stored at -80 °C at the Institute of Global Health, virology section of the University of Liverpool, where all laboratory work was performed. \nResults: Hospital records were poorly preserved and did not provide meaningful data for trend analyses or disease surveillance. 1331 participants were enrolled in this prospective study. Stool samples were collected from 1242 (93.3%) participants, of whom 957 (77.0%) were ambulatory, 123 (9.9%) hospitalised and 160 (12.8%) controls without diarrhoea. 881 and 450 children with diarrhoea were recruited from government and the private hospitals, respectively. The median age of the children was 8 months in the ambulatory and 9.5 months in the hospitalized group (p<0.05). A total of 209 (16.8%) children were vaccinated, 858 (69.1%) were unvaccinated, and 174 (14.0%) had an unclear vaccination status. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:腹泻是儿童死亡的第二大原因。尼日利亚是非洲大陆腹泻病死亡率最高的国家,但关于具体病因和轮状病毒感染比例的信息很少。这项研究的主要目的是描述联邦首都地区阿布贾患有和不患有轮状病毒腹泻的幼儿的特征。材料和方法:从阿布贾综合医院检索与腹泻有关的当地医院活动数据进行回顾性审查。随后于2012年9月至2013年8月对5岁以下急性腹泻患儿进行为期一年的前瞻性描述性研究。在三所政府医院和一所私立医院招募患有急性腹泻的儿童。没有腹泻的儿童作为对照组。来自尼日利亚的粪便标本用冷链箱运输,并在利物浦大学全球卫生研究所病毒学部门-80°C下保存,所有实验室工作都在那里进行。结果:医院记录保存不良,不能为趋势分析或疾病监测提供有意义的数据。1331名参与者参加了这项前瞻性研究。收集了1242名(93.3%)参与者的粪便样本,其中957名(77.0%)是流动的,123名(9.9%)是住院的,160名(12.8%)是没有腹泻的对照组。从政府医院和私立医院分别招募了881名和450名腹泻儿童。门诊组患儿平均年龄为8个月,住院组患儿平均年龄为9.5个月(p<0.05)。共有209名(16.8%)儿童接种疫苗,858名(69.1%)儿童未接种疫苗,174名(14.0%)儿童接种情况不明确。腹泻患儿123例(11.4%)和对照组2例(1.2%)轮状病毒ELISA检测呈阳性。在患有腹泻的儿童中,在公立医院就诊的881名儿童中有92名(10.4%)患有轮状病毒,而在已实施疫苗接种计划的私立医院就诊的450名儿童中有33名(7.3%)患有轮状病毒(p<0.001)。轮状病毒感染的高峰期是11月和2月。经间接评估,Rotarix®RV1疫苗预防轮状病毒腹泻的有效性为64.5%。结论:轮状病毒是阿布贾儿童,特别是未接种疫苗儿童的重要病原体。尼日利亚非常希望引进轮状病毒疫苗,但这仍在等待中。地方和国家的基础设施不足以对腹泻病进行基本监测,必须改善这一点,并提供病毒学粪便检测,以监测计划中的疫苗规划。这里报告的回顾性研究提供了疫苗在阿布贾效力的间接证据,但需要前瞻性证实。
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Burden of Rotavirus Diarrhoea in Children in Abuja
Background: Diarrhoea is the second leading cause of death in children. Nigeria has the continent’s highest mortality due to diarrhoeal diseases with little information on specific causes and the proportion affected by rotavirus infection. The main objectives of this study were to describe the features of young children with diarrhoea, with and without rotavirus, in Abuja the Federal Capital Territory. Materials and Methods: Retrospective review of local hospital activity data related to diarrhoea was retrieved from General Hospitals in Abuja. Then a one-year prospective descriptive study of children under 5 years of age with acute diarrhoea was conducted from September 2012 to August 2013. Children with acute diarrhoea attending three government hospitals and one private hospital were recruited. Children without diarrhoea were recruited as the control group. Faecal specimens were transported in cold chain boxes from Nigeria and stored at -80 °C at the Institute of Global Health, virology section of the University of Liverpool, where all laboratory work was performed. Results: Hospital records were poorly preserved and did not provide meaningful data for trend analyses or disease surveillance. 1331 participants were enrolled in this prospective study. Stool samples were collected from 1242 (93.3%) participants, of whom 957 (77.0%) were ambulatory, 123 (9.9%) hospitalised and 160 (12.8%) controls without diarrhoea. 881 and 450 children with diarrhoea were recruited from government and the private hospitals, respectively. The median age of the children was 8 months in the ambulatory and 9.5 months in the hospitalized group (p<0.05). A total of 209 (16.8%) children were vaccinated, 858 (69.1%) were unvaccinated, and 174 (14.0%) had an unclear vaccination status. Rotavirus ELISA was positive in 123 (11.4%) children with diarrhoea and 2 (1.2%) controls. Among children with diarrhoea, 92 (10.4%) of 881 children attending government hospitals had rotavirus, compared to 33 (7.3%) of 450 children attending a private hospital (p<0.001) where a vaccination program had been in place. The peak months for rotavirus infection were November and February. The efficacy of Rotarix® RV1 vaccine in preventing rotavirus diarrhoea was indirectly assessed to be 64.5%. Conclusion: Rotavirus is an important pathogen in children, especially in unvaccinated children in Abuja. The introduction of a rotavirus vaccine is highly desirable in Nigeria, but this is still awaited. Local and national infrastructure are inadequate for basic surveillance of diarrhoeal disease, and this will have to be improved, together with access to virological stool testing, to monitor the planned vaccine program. The retrospective studies reported here provide indirect evidence of vaccine efficacy in Abuja but need prospective confirmation.
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