Abstract
BackgroundAn increasing use of point of care diagnostic tests that exclude malaria, coupled with a declining malaria burden in many endemic countries, is highlighting the lack of ability of many health systems to manage other causes of febrile disease. A lack of knowledge of distribution of these pathogens, and a lack of screening and point-of-care diagnostics to identify them, prevents effective management of these generally treatable contributors to disease burden. While prospective data collection is vital, an untapped body of knowledge already exists in the published health literature.MethodsFocusing on the Mekong region of Southeast Asia, published data from 1986 to 2011 was screened to for frequency of isolation of pathogens implicated in aetiology of non-malarial febrile illness. Eligibility criteria included English-language peer-reviewed studies recording major pathogens for which specific management is likely to be warranted. Of 1,252 identified papers, 146 met inclusion criteria and were analyzed and data mapped.ResultsData tended to be clustered around specific areas where research institutions operate, and where resources to conduct studies are greater. The most frequently reported pathogen was dengue virus (n = 70), followed by Orientia tsutsugamushi and Rickettsia species (scrub typhus/murine typhus/spotted fever group n = 58), Leptospira spp. (n = 35), Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi and Paratyphi (enteric fever n = 24), Burkholderia pseudomallei (melioidosis n = 14), and Japanese encephalitis virus (n = 18). Wide tracts with very little published data on aetiology of fever are apparent.Discussion and ConclusionsThis mapping demonstrates a very heterogeneous distribution of information on the causes of fever in the Mekong countries. Further directed data collection to address gaps in the evidence-base, and expansion to a global database of pathogen distribution, is readily achievable, and would help define wider priorities for research and development to improve syndromic management of fever, prioritize diagnostic development, and guide empirical therapy.
Highlights
Millennium development goal 4 (MDG4) aims for reduction in infant and childhood mortality by two thirds, between 1990 and 2015 [1]
As malaria management transitions from symptom-based to parasite-based diagnosis, fuelled by increased resources and the tightening of the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations on parasite-based diagnosis prior to treatment [3], it is apparent that non-malarial fevers are major, uncounted and neglected causes of morbidity and mortality [4,5,6]
By ‘non-malaria febrile illness (NMFI)’, we refer here to infectious diseases in patients who present with undifferentiated fever and require malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs)/microscopy - but in whom these tests are negative
Summary
Millennium development goal 4 (MDG4) aims for reduction in infant and childhood mortality by two thirds, between 1990 and 2015 [1] Achieving this in most low-income countries will require major reductions in mortality due to infectious diseases. This aim drives the current high resource allocation for malaria interventions in aid budgets, associated in recent years with considerable reduction in reported malaria mortality [2]. An increasing use of point of care diagnostic tests that exclude malaria, coupled with a declining malaria burden in many endemic countries, is highlighting the lack of ability of many health systems to manage other causes of febrile disease. While prospective data collection is vital, an untapped body of knowledge already exists in the published health literature
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