Causes of fever in Tanzanian adults attending outpatient clinics: a prospective cohort study
Boillat-Blanco N, Mbarack Z, Samaka J, Mlaganile T, Kazimoto T, Mamin A, Genton B, Kaiser L, et al. (9 authors)
Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases · 2020-09
Abstract
Objectives Exploring fever aetiologies improves patient management. Most febrile adults are outpatients, but all previous studies were conducted in inpatients. This study describes the spectrum of diseases in adults attending outpatient clinics in urban Tanzania. Methods We recruited consecutive adults with temperature ≥38°C in a prospective cohort study. We collected medical history and performed a clinical examination. We performed 27 364 microbiological diagnostic tests (rapid tests, serologies, cultures and molecular analyses) for a large range of pathogens on blood and nasopharyngeal samples. We based our diagnosis on predefined clinical and microbiological criteria. Results Of 519 individuals, 469 (89%) had a clinically or microbiologically documented infection and 128 (25%) were human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) -infected. We identified 643 diagnoses: 264 (41%) acute respiratory infections (36 (5.6%) pneumonia, 39 (6.1%) tuberculosis), 71 (11%) infections with another focus (31 (4.8%) gastrointestinal, 26 (4.0%) urogenital, 8 (1.2%) central nervous system) and 252 (39%) infections without focus (134 (21%) dengue, 30 (4.7%) malaria, 28 (4.4%) typhoid). Of the 519 individuals, 318 (61%), 179 (34%), 30 (6%) and 15 (3%), respectively, had a viral, bacterial, parasitic and fungal acute infection. HIV-infected individuals had more bacterial infections than HIV-negative (80/122 (66%) versus 100/391 (26%); p 3 and 25/52 (48%) if CD4 >200 cells/mm 3 , p 0.02). Conclusions Viral diseases caused most febrile episodes in adults attending outpatient clinics except in HIV-infected patients. HIV status and a low CD4 level strongly determined the need for antibiotics. Systematic HIV screening is essential to appropriately manage febrile patients.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- HIV-1
- Bacterial Infections
- HIV Infections
- Fever
- Cohort Studies
- Prospective Studies
- Adult
- Ambulatory Care Facilities
- Tanzania
- Female
- Male
- Young Adult