Mortality and neurodevelopmental outcomes of acute bacterial meningitis in children aged <5 years in Pakistan.

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ID: 39425
2013
Significant neurodevelopmental sequelae are known to occur after acute bacterial meningitis (ABM). This study determined the burden of such sequelae in Pakistani children aged <5 years to guide policies for Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) and pneumococcal vaccination.Cases of ABM were recruited from hospital-based surveillance and assigned to 1 of 3 etiologic groups (Hib, Streptococcus pneumoniae, or unknown etiology). Two age-matched controls were recruited for each case. Six months after enrollment, each case underwent neurologic history and examination, neurodevelopmental evaluation, and neurophysiological hearing test. Controls were assessed in parallel.Of 188 cases, 64 (34%) died. Mortality among subgroups were 7 (27%), 14 (28%), and 43 (39%) for Hib, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and unknown etiology, respectively. Eighty cases and 160 controls completed the assessments. Sequelae among cases included developmental delay (37%), motor deficit (31%), hearing impairment (18.5%), epilepsy (14%), and vision impairment (14%). Sequelae were higher after pneumococcal meningitis (19, 73%) compared with Hib meningitis (8, 53%). Compared with controls, cases were at significantly higher risk for all sequelae (P < .0001).ABM causes a substantial long-term burden of poor neurodevelopmental outcomes. Hib and pneumococcal vaccines are very effective interventions to prevent meningitis and its disabling sequelae.
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Authors Khowaja, Asif Raza;Mohiuddin, Syed;Cohen, Adam L;Khalid, Ahmed;Mehmood, Usma;Naqvi, Farnaz;Asad, Nargis;Pardhan, Khatidja;Mulholland, Kim;Hajjeh, Rana;Zaidi, Anita K M;Shafqat, Saad;, ;
Journal the journal of pediatrics
Year 2013
DOI 10.1016/j.jpeds.2013.03.035
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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