A prospective study of the importance of enteric fever as a cause of non-malarial febrile illness in patients admitted to Chittagong Medical College Hospital, Bangladesh.

Rapeephan R Maude ; Aniruddha Ghose ; Rasheda Samad ; Hanna K de Jong ; Masako Fukushima ; Lalith Wijedoru ; Mahtab Uddin Hassan ; Md Amir Hossain ; Md Rezaul Karim ; Abdullah Abu Sayeed ; +19 more... Stannie van den Ende ; Sujat Pal ; ASM Zahed ; Wahid Rahman ; Rifat Karnain ; Rezina Islam ; Dung Thi Ngoc Tran ; Tuyen Thanh Ha ; Anh Hong Pham ; James I Campbell ; H Rogier van Doorn ; Richard J Maude ; Tom van der Poll ; W Joost Wiersinga ; Nicholas PJ Day ; Stephen Baker ; Arjen M Dondorp ; Christopher M Parry ; Md Abul Faiz ; (2016) A prospective study of the importance of enteric fever as a cause of non-malarial febrile illness in patients admitted to Chittagong Medical College Hospital, Bangladesh. BMC infectious diseases, 16 (1). 567-. ISSN 1471-2334 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1886-3
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BACKGROUND: Fever is a common cause of hospital admission in Bangladesh but causative agents, other than malaria, are not routinely investigated. Enteric fever is thought to be common. METHODS: Adults and children admitted to Chittagong Medical College Hospital with a temperature of ≥38.0 °C were investigated using a blood smear for malaria, a blood culture, real-time PCR to detect Salmonella Typhi, S. Paratyphi A and other pathogens in blood and CSF and an NS1 antigen dengue ELISA. RESULTS: We enrolled 300 febrile patients with a negative malaria smear between January and June 2012: 156 children (aged ≤15 years) and 144 adults with a median (interquartile range) age of 13 (5-31) years and median (IQR) illness duration before admission of five (2-8) days. Clinical enteric fever was diagnosed in 52 patients (17.3 %), lower respiratory tract infection in 48 (16.0 %), non-specific febrile illness in 48 (16.0 %), a CNS infection in 37 patients (12.3 %), urinary sepsis in 23 patients (7.7 %), an upper respiratory tract infection in 21 patients (7.0 %), and diarrhea or dysentery in 21 patients (7.0 %). Malaria was still suspected in seven patients despite a negative microscopy test. S. Typhi was detected in blood by culture or PCR in 34 (11.3 %) of patients. Of note Rickettsia typhi and Orientia tsutsugamushi were detected by PCR in two and one patient respectively. Twenty-nine (9 %) patients died during their hospital admission (15/160 (9.4 %) of children and 14/144 (9.7 %) adults). Two of 52 (3.8 %) patients with enteric fever, 5/48 (10.4 %) patients with lower respiratory tract infections, and 12/37 (32.4 %) patients with CNS infection died. CONCLUSION: Enteric fever was confirmed in 11.3 % of patients admitted to this hospital in Bangladesh with non-malaria fever. Lower respiratory tract and CNS infections were also common. CNS infections in this location merit more detailed study due to the high mortality.


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