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      Acute undifferentiated fever in India: a multicentre study of aetiology and diagnostic accuracy

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          Abstract

          Background

          The objectives of this study were to determine the proportion of malaria, bacteraemia, scrub typhus, leptospirosis, chikungunya and dengue among hospitalized patients with acute undifferentiated fever in India, and to describe the performance of standard diagnostic methods.

          Methods

          During April 2011–November 2012, 1564 patients aged ≥5 years with febrile illness for 2–14 days were consecutively included in an observational study at seven community hospitals in six states in India.

          Malaria microscopy, blood culture, Dengue rapid NS1 antigen and IgM Combo test, Leptospira IgM ELISA, Scrub typhus IgM ELISA and Chikungunya IgM ELISA were routinely performed at the hospitals.

          Second line testing, Dengue IgM capture ELISA (MAC-ELISA), Scrub typhus immunofluorescence (IFA), Leptospira Microscopic Agglutination Test (MAT), malaria PCR and malaria immunochromatographic rapid diagnostic test (RDT) Parahit Total™ were performed at the coordinating centre. Convalescence samples were not available.

          Case definitions were as follows: Leptospirosis: Positive ELISA and positive MAT. Scrub typhus: Positive ELISA and positive IFA. Dengue: Positive RDT and/or positive MAC-ELISA. Chikungunya: Positive ELISA. Bacteraemia: Growth in blood culture excluding those defined as contaminants. Malaria: Positive genus-specific PCR.

          Results

          Malaria was diagnosed in 17% (268/1564) and among these 54% had P. falciparum. Dengue was diagnosed in 16% (244/1564). Bacteraemia was found in 8% (124/1564), and among these Salmonella typhi or S. paratyphi constituted 35%. Scrub typhus was diagnosed in 10%, leptospirosis in 7% and chikungunya in 6%. Fulfilling more than one case definition was common, most frequent in chikungunya where 26% (25/98) also had positive dengue test.

          Conclusions

          Malaria and dengue were the most common causes of fever in this study. A high overlap between case definitions probably reflects high prevalence of prior infections, cross reactivity and subclinical infections, rather than high prevalence of coinfections. Low accuracy of routine diagnostic tests should be taken into consideration when approaching the patient with acute undifferentiated fever in India.

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          Most cited references39

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          Adult and child malaria mortality in India: a nationally representative mortality survey.

          National malaria death rates are difficult to assess because reliably diagnosed malaria is likely to be cured, and deaths in the community from undiagnosed malaria could be misattributed in retrospective enquiries to other febrile causes of death, or vice-versa. We aimed to estimate plausible ranges of malaria mortality in India, the most populous country where the disease remains common. Full-time non-medical field workers interviewed families or other respondents about each of 122,000 deaths during 2001-03 in 6671 randomly selected areas of India, obtaining a half-page narrative plus answers to specific questions about the severity and course of any fevers. Each field report was sent to two of 130 trained physicians, who independently coded underlying causes, with discrepancies resolved either via anonymous reconciliation or adjudication. Of all coded deaths at ages 1 month to 70 years, 2681 (3·6%) of 75,342 were attributed to malaria. Of these, 2419 (90%) were in rural areas and 2311 (86%) were not in any health-care facility. Death rates attributed to malaria correlated geographically with local malaria transmission ratesderived independently from the Indian malaria control programme. The adjudicated results show 205,000 malaria deaths per year in India before age 70 years (55,000 in early childhood, 30,000 at ages 5-14 years, 120,000 at ages 15-69 years); 1·8% cumulative probability of death from malaria before age 70 years. Plausible lower and upper bounds (on the basis of only the initial coding) were 125,000-277,000. Malaria accounted for a substantial minority of about 1·3 million unattended rural fever deaths attributed to infectious diseases in people younger than 70 years. Despite uncertainty as to which unattended febrile deaths are from malaria, even the lower bound greatly exceeds the WHO estimate of only 15,000 malaria deaths per year in India (5000 early childhood, 10 000 thereafter). This low estimate should be reconsidered, as should the low WHO estimate of adult malaria deaths worldwide. US National Institutes of Health, Canadian Institute of Health Research, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            Burden of malaria in India: retrospective and prospective view.

            In India, nine Anopheline vectors are involved in transmitting malaria in diverse geo-ecological paradigms. About 2 million confirmed malaria cases and 1,000 deaths are reported annually, although 15 million cases and 20,000 deaths are estimated by WHO South East Asia Regional Office. India contributes 77% of the total malaria in Southeast Asia. Multi-organ involvement/dysfunction is reported in both Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax cases. Most of the malaria burden is borne by economically productive ages. The states inhabited by ethnic tribes are entrenched with stable malaria, particularly P. falciparum with growing drug resistance. The profound impact of complicated malaria in pregnancy includes anemia, abortions, low birth weight in neonates, still births, and maternal mortality. Retrospective analysis of burden of malaria showed that disability adjusted life years lost due to malaria were 1.86 million years. Cost-benefit analysis suggests that each Rupee invested by the National Malaria Control Program pays a rich dividend of 19.7 Rupees.
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              Diagnosis of Scrub Typhus

              Scrub typhus is transmitted by trombiculid mites and is endemic to East and Southeast Asia and Northern Australia. The clinical syndrome classically consists of a fever, rash, and eschar, but scrub typhus also commonly presents as an undifferentiated fever that requires laboratory confirmation of the diagnosis, usually by indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) assay. We discuss the limitations of IFA, debate the value of other methods based on antigen detection and nucleic acid amplification, and outline recommendations for future study.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                kristine.moerch@helse-bergen.no
                anandmanoharan@pushpagiri.in
                sarachandy@yahoo.co.in
                novinc@gmail.com
                gerardouria@gmail.com
                suvarnapatil@walawalkarhospital.com
                anilhenry@gmail.com
                joelnesaraj@gmail.com
                cijoy_kuriakose@yahoo.com
                ashitasingh@live.com
                siby5184@hotmail.com
                christel.gill.haanshuus@helse-bergen.no
                Nina.Langeland@uib.no
                bjorn.blomberg@uib.no
                gvidtrc@gmail.com
                dean@apolloimsr.edu.in
                Journal
                BMC Infect Dis
                BMC Infect. Dis
                BMC Infectious Diseases
                BioMed Central (London )
                1471-2334
                4 October 2017
                4 October 2017
                2017
                : 17
                : 665
                Affiliations
                [1 ]ISNI 0000 0000 9753 1393, GRID grid.412008.f, National Centre for Tropical Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, , Haukeland University Hospital, ; Bergen, Norway
                [2 ]ISNI 0000 0004 1936 7443, GRID grid.7914.b, Department of Clinical Science, , University of Bergen, ; Bergen, Norway
                [3 ]ISNI 0000 0004 1767 8969, GRID grid.11586.3b, Infectious Diseases Training and Research Centre, Department of Medicine, Christian Medical College, ; Vellore, India
                [4 ]Duncan Hospital, Raxaul, Bihar India
                [5 ]Rural Development Trust Hospital, Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh India
                [6 ]B.K.L. Walawalkar Hospital, Ratnagiri, Maharashtra India
                [7 ]Christian Hospital, Mungeli, Chhattisgarh India
                [8 ]ISNI 0000 0004 1804 1660, GRID grid.460898.b, Bethesda Hospital, ; Ambur, Tamil Nadu India
                [9 ]Christian Fellowship Hospital, Oddanchatram, Tamil Nadu India
                [10 ]Baptist Christian Hospital, Tezpur, Assam India
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6401-1353
                Article
                2764
                10.1186/s12879-017-2764-3
                5628453
                28978319
                9d809d52-9074-4e14-b6ce-45febf2525c9
                © The Author(s). 2017

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver ( http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

                History
                : 4 May 2017
                : 25 September 2017
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2017

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                malaria,bacteraemia,leptospirosis,scrub typhus,dengue,chikungunya,prevalence,india,diagnosis

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