Abstract

BackgroundInvasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is a rare but severe bacterial infection, of which a high proportion of survivors are affected by sequelae. In Denmark, IMD is a notifiable disease and data collection on sequelae information has been automated, enabling studies of sequelae due to IMD diagnosed after discharge. The aim of this study was to examine possible determinants for sequelae after IMD and to describe the distribution of sequelae by age, serogroup and clinical presentation, for all cases in Denmark from 2005–2020.MethodsData from The National Database for Notifiable Infectious Diseases was linked to data from The Danish National Patient Register and the Civil Registration System. Logistic regression models were used to study whether age, serogroup and/or clinical presentation were associated with sequelae. A descriptive analysis of the proportion of different types of sequelae across age groups, serogroups and clinical presentations was performed.ResultsIn total, 25% of IMD survivors experienced one or more sequelae. We found no significant association between sequelae and age. The five most common sequelae in decreasing order of incidence were hearing loss, epilepsy, learning disabilities, headache and visual defects/loss of vision, with rates ranging from 8.2 to 2.8% of IMD survivors. The proportion of survivors with hearing loss and visual defects/loss of vision was not significantly different between clinical presentations.ConclusionsWe suggest revising IMD treatment guidelines, to include routine referral to hearing and vision tests, irrespective of clinical presentation. Furthermore, it is important to increase the awareness among parents of children who have had IMD of possible future learning disabilities to make sure that necessary measures are taken in a timely manner.

Highlights

  • Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is a rare but severe bacterial infection, of which a high propor‐ tion of survivors are affected by sequelae

  • Several studies found that older age and clinical presentation are associated with a higher risk of a fatal course of IMD [7, 8], but to our knowledge, studies on whether certain determinants are associated with a higher risk of sequelae after IMD have not been done

  • The primary aim of our study was to investigate whether age, serogroup and clinical presentation are determinants associated with sequelae among survivors of IMD and to describe the distribution of the different sequelae per age group, serogroup, and clinical presentation during the period 2005–2020

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is a rare but severe bacterial infection, of which a high propor‐ tion of survivors are affected by sequelae. The aim of this study was to examine possible determinants for sequelae after IMD and to describe the distribution of sequelae by age, serogroup and clinical presentation, for all cases in Denmark from 2005–2020. Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is a rare but severe bacterial infection caused by Neisseria meningitidis. Several studies found that older age and clinical presentation (septicaemia only and meningitis and septicaemia) are associated with a higher risk of a fatal course of IMD [7, 8], but to our knowledge, studies on whether certain determinants are associated with a higher risk of sequelae after IMD have not been done

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