Abstract

BackgroundTyphoid and paratyphoid remain the most common bloodstream infections in many resource-poor settings. The World Health Organization recommends typhoid conjugate vaccines for country-specific introduction, but questions regarding typhoid and paratyphoid epidemiology persist, especially regarding their severity in young children.MethodsWe conducted enteric fever surveillance in Bangladesh from 2004 through 2016 in the inpatient departments of 2 pediatric hospitals and the outpatient departments of 1 pediatric hospital and 1 private consultation clinic. Blood cultures were conducted at the discretion of the treating physicians; cases of culture-confirmed typhoid/paratyphoid were included. Hospitalizations and durations of hospitalizations were used as proxies for severity in children <12 years old.ResultsWe identified 7072 typhoid and 1810 paratyphoid culture-confirmed cases. There was no increasing trend in the proportion of paratyphoid over the 13 years. The median age in the typhoid cases was 60 months, and 15% of the cases occurred in children <24 months old. The median age of the paratyphoid cases was significantly higher, at 90 months (P < .001); 9.4% were in children <24 months old. The proportion of children (<12 years old) hospitalized with typhoid and paratyphoid (32% and 21%, respectively) decreased with age; there was no significant difference in durations of hospitalizations between age groups. However, children with typhoid were hospitalized for longer than those with paratyphoid.ConclusionsTyphoid and paratyphoid fever are common in Dhaka, including among children under 2 years old, who have equivalent disease severity as older children. Early immunization with typhoid conjugate vaccines could avert substantial morbidity, but broader efforts are required to reduce the paratyphoid burden.

Highlights

  • Typhoid and paratyphoid remain the most common bloodstream infections in many resource-poor settings

  • We identified 7072 typhoid and 1810 paratyphoid culture-confirmed cases

  • The proportion of children (

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Summary

Methods

We conducted enteric fever surveillance in Bangladesh from 2004 through 2016 in the inpatient departments of 2 pediatric hospitals and the outpatient departments of 1 pediatric hospital and 1 private consultation clinic. Blood cultures were conducted at the discretion of the treating physicians; cases of culture-confirmed typhoid/paratyphoid were included. This study included 3 sites in Dhaka, Bangladesh: (1) Dhaka Shishu Hospital (DSH), (2) Shishu Shasthya Foundation Hospital (SSFH), and (3) an outpatient-based diagnostic center, the Popular Diagnostic Center (PDC). With 640 beds, DSH is the largest pediatric hospital in Bangladesh, and provides primary to tertiary care to patients up to 18 years of age; 47% of patients are treated free of cost. For IPD-based surveillance to capture hospitalized enteric fever cases, we included cases from the IPDs of both DSH and SSFH. We enrolled patients with positive blood cultures for Salmonella Typhi or Paratyphi

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