Abstract

In the 1980s, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae were identified as the principal causes of severe pneumonia in children. We investigated the etiology of severe childhood pneumonia in Kenya after introduction of conjugate vaccines against H. influenzae type b, in 2001, and S. pneumoniae, in 2011. We conducted a case-control study between August 2011 and November 2013 among residents of the Kilifi Health and Demographic Surveillance System 28 days to 59 months of age. Cases were hospitalized at Kilifi County Hospital with severe or very severe pneumonia according to the 2005 World Health Organization definition. Controls were randomly selected from the community and frequency matched to cases on age and season. We tested nasal and oropharyngeal samples, sputum, pleural fluid, and blood specimens and used the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health Integrated Analysis, combining latent class analysis and Bayesian methods, to attribute etiology. We enrolled 630 and 863 HIV-uninfected cases and controls, respectively. Among the cases, 282 (44%) had abnormal chest radiographs (CXR positive), 33 (5%) died in hospital, and 177 (28%) had diagnoses other than pneumonia at discharge. Among CXR-positive pneumonia cases, viruses and bacteria accounted for 77% (95% CrI: 67%-85%) and 16% (95% CrI: 10%-26%) of pneumonia attribution, respectively. Respiratory syncytial virus, S. pneumoniae and H. influenza, accounted for 37% (95% CrI: 31%-44%), 5% (95% CrI: 3%-9%), and 6% (95% CrI: 2%-11%), respectively. Respiratory syncytial virus was the main cause of CXR-positive pneumonia. The small contribution of H. influenzae type b and pneumococcus to pneumonia may reflect the impact of vaccine introductions in this population.

Highlights

  • In the 1980s, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae were identified as the principal causes of severe pneumonia in children

  • Study Participants Of 7545 children admitted to KCH in the study period, 2202 were Kilifi Health and Demographic Surveillance System (KHDSS) residents 28 days to 59 months of age; of these, 832 had severe or very severe pneumonia, 784 were eligible for inclusion in Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH), and 634 were enrolled (Fig. 1)

  • Using an integrated analysis of all available etiology data, we found that viruses accounted for 77% of the attribution of CXR-positive pneumonia among HIV-uninfected children with World Health Organization (WHO)-defined severe or very severe pneumonia in Kilifi, Kenya

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Summary

PERCH Site Results

MBChB, MSc,*† Alice Kamau, MSc,* Susan Morpeth, FRACP, PhD,* Sidi Kazungu, RN,* Micah Silaba, MBChB, Mmed,* Joyce Sande, MBChB, Mmed,‡ Angela Karani, BSc,* Sammy Nyongesa, MSc,* Salim Mwarumba, MSc,* Robert Musyimi, HND,* Anne Bett, HND,* Siti Wande, RN,§ Mohammed Shebe, HND,§ Mwanajuma Ngama, HND,§ Patrick K. MD,**†† Christine Prosperi, ScM, ║ Katherine L.

Background
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