Abstract

Objective: To understand the etiological characteristics of bacterial diarrhea in different areas, including large cities, mid-sized/small cities and rural area, in China. Methods: A cross-sectional surveillance was conducted in 17 provinces of China from 2010 to 2014. The acute diarrhea outpatients were selected from clinics or hospitals in large cities, mid-sized/small cities, including rural-urban fringe zones, and rural areas. The demographical and clinical characteristics of the patients were collected by using questionnaire, and stool samples were taken from them for laboratory detection of 17 kinds of bacteria. The differences in pathogen positive rates (PPR) and pathogen spectrum across the cases from three-type areas were compared. The different infection risk in different cases were analyzed with unconditional logistic regression model. Results: In our study, we enrolled 9 253 cases from large cities, 5 138 cases from rural areas and 13 683 cases from midsized/small cites. The pathogen with largest differences in infection rate across the three-type areas was Shigella (S.) flexneri (rural area: 5.81%, mid-sized/small city: 2.78%, large city: 0.46%), followed by Aeromonas (A.) hydrophila (rural area: 2.14%, mid-sized/small city: 0.96%, large city: 0.48%). Compared with cases in large cities, the cases in mid-sized/small cities and rural areas had higher infection risks for S. flexneri (mid-sized/small city: OR=6.481, 95%CI: 4.666-9.002, rural area: OR=11.304, 95%CI: 8.018-15.938) and A. hydrophila (mid-sized/small city: OR=1.992, 95%CI:1.401-2.832, rural area: OR=4.083, 95%CI: 2.833-5.884). The constituent ratio of diarrheagenic Escherichia coli and Salmonella increased with the urbanization development, while the ratios of Shigella and A. hydrophila had an opposite trend. S. sonnei (60.00%) was the predominant serogroup of Shigella in urban infections, while S. flexneri (77.37%) was the predominant serogroup in rural infections. Conclusion: The differences in pathogen spectrum of bacterial diarrhea were obvious across large cities, mid-sized/small cities and rural areas in China, especially the differences in the infection rates of S. flexneri and A. hydrophila.

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