Causes of Pediatric Meningitis in Botswana: Results From a 16-Year National Meningitis Audit
Mitchell HK, Mokomane M, Leeme T, Tlhako N, Tsholo K, Ramodimoosi C, Dube B, Mokobela KO, et al. (19 authors)
The Pediatric infectious disease journal · 2019-09
Abstract
Background Central nervous system infections are an important cause of childhood morbidity and mortality in high HIV-prevalence settings of Africa. We evaluated the epidemiology of pediatric meningitis in Botswana during the rollout of antiretroviral therapy, pneumococcal conjugate vaccine and Haemophilus influenzae type B (HiB) vaccine. Methods We performed a cross-sectional study of children ( Results A total of 6796 unique cases were identified. Median age was 1 year [interquartile range 0-3]; 10.4% (435/4186) of children with available HIV-related records were known HIV-infected. Overall, 30.4% (2067/6796) had abnormal CSF findings (positive microbiologic testing or CSF pleocytosis). Ten percent (651/6796) had a confirmed microbiologic diagnosis; including 26.9% (175/651) Cryptococcus, 18.9% (123/651) S. pneumoniae, 20.3% (132/651) H. influenzae and 1.1% (7/651) Mycobacterium tuberculosis. During 2013-2014, national cryptococcal meningitis incidence was 1.3 cases per 100,000 person-years (95% confidence interval, 0.8-2.1) and pneumococcal meningitis incidence 0.7 per 100,000 person-years (95% confidence interval, 0.3-1.3), with no HiB meningitis diagnosed. Conclusions Following HiB vaccination, a marked decline in microbiologically confirmed cases of H. influenzae meningitis occurred. Cryptococcal meningitis remains the most common confirmed etiology, demonstrating gaps in prevention-of-mother-to-child transmission and early HIV diagnosis. The high proportion of abnormal CSF samples with no microbiologic diagnosis highlights limitation in available diagnostics.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Meningitis, Haemophilus
- Meningitis, Pneumococcal
- Meningitis, Cryptococcal
- HIV Infections
- Bacterial Capsules
- Haemophilus Vaccines
- Pneumococcal Vaccines
- Vaccines, Conjugate
- Anti-Retroviral Agents
- Incidence
- Cross-Sectional Studies
- Child
- Child, Preschool
- Infant
- Infant, Newborn
- Medical Audit
- Botswana
- Female
- Male
- Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical