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Global Burden of Childhood Diarrhea and Pneumonia Christa L. Fischer Walker 1 , Igor Rudan 2 , Li Liu 1 , Harish Nair 2 , Evropi Theodoratou 2 , Zulfiqar Bhutta 3 , Katherine L. O ’ Brien 1 , Harry Campbell 2 , Robert E. Black 1 1 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
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Global Burden of Childhood Diarrhea and Pneumonia Christa L. Fischer Walker1, Igor Rudan2, Li Liu1, Harish Nair2, Evropi Theodoratou2, Zulfiqar Bhutta3, Katherine L. O’Brien1, Harry Campbell2, Robert E. Black1 1 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 2 University of Edinburgh 3 Aga Khan University
A comprehensive epidemiology review • Morbidity and mortality from childhood diarrhoea and pneumonia are falling, but action is needed globally and at country level to accelerate the reduction • We sought to compare and contrast the burden of disease for diarrhea and pneumonia among children < 5 years of age • We conducted 24 separate literature reviews to span the full epidemiologic spectrum of disease including: incidence, severe episodes, mortality, sequelae, age and sex distribution, etiology and risk factors for diarrhoea and pneumonia among children < 5 years of age
Regional burden of severe diarrhoea and pneumonia episodes among children aged 0-4 years in 2010 Diarrhoea 36.1 million episodes Pneumonia 14.1 million episodes AFRICA
Regional burden of diarrhoea and pneumonia mortality among children aged 0-4 years in 2011 Diarrhoea 711,800 deaths Pneumonia 1,256,800 deaths Africa
Distribution of cases of, and deaths from diarrhoea and pneumonia in children age 0-4 yrs
Annual rates of change in diarrhea-specific and pneumonia-specific mortality, 2000 - 2010
Diarrhoea and the risk of long-term sequelae • A single episode of diarrhoea is typically self-limiting with ORS and zinc for treatment • In low-income settings, multiple diarrhoea episodes per year can increase odds of stunting such that the proportion of stunting attributable to 5 episodes of diarrhoea in the first 2 years of life is 25% • Additional rare sequelae include: Guillain Barré Syndrome, Reactive arthritis, Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome
Pneumonia and the risk of long-term sequelae • The risk of at least one long-term major sequela from pneumonia is 5.5% (95% CI: 2.8-8.3) in non-severe pneumonia and 13.6% (95% CI: 6.2-21.1) in hospitalized severe pneumonia • Sequelae include: reduction in lung volume and bronchiectasis (0.9% of severe cases) • The risk of sequelae is higher among children < 2 years of age (13.4%, 95% CI: 4.5-22.3)
Vaccine-preventable causes of diarrhoea severe morbidity and mortality • Rotavirusis estimated to cause 28% of severe diarrhoea, resulting in 9.9 million severe episodesandmore than 193,000 deaths • Vibrio cholerae accounts for 1% of severe diarrhoea resulting in an estimated 456,000 severe episodes and 11,700 deaths • Estimates are based on data collected over more than 20 years and thus do not account for yearly variation as a result of epidemics or recent widespread vaccination campaigns in selected countries * Number of episodes correlates to 2011 estimates; number of deaths correlates to 2010 estimates
Vaccine-preventable causes of pneumonia severe morbidity and mortality • Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common vaccine-preventable pathogen and accounts for 18.3% of severe episodes (2.6 million) and 32.7% of deaths (411,000) • Haemophilus influenzae type Baccounts for 4.1% of severe episodes (574,000) and 15.7% of deaths (197,000) • Influenza virus led to 982,000 episodes (7%) and 137,000 deaths (10.9%) * Number of episodes correlates to 2011 estimates; number of deaths correlates to 2010 estimates
Nutritional Risk Factors and Increased Risk of Mortality • Lack of breastfeeding during the first 2 yeas of life increases the risk of diarrhoea morbidity and mortality and pneumonia mortality
Nutritional Risk Factors and Increased Risk of Mortality • Underweight, stunting, and wasting increase the risk of mortality from both diarrhoea and pneumonia with the risk increasing as the degree of undernutrition increases • Vitamin A deficiency increases the risk of mortality from diarrhoea (RR =1.47) by increasing the risk of severe disease • Zinc deficiency increases the risk of diarrhoea incidence (RR=1.15) and severe pneumonia and may increases risk of both diarrhoea and pneumonia mortality
Key Messages and Discussion • Diarrhoea and pneumonia remain the leading infectious causes of death in children younger than 5 years, and together caused an estimated 2 million deaths, in 2011. • 72% of deaths associated with diarrhoea and 81% of those associated with pneumonia happen in the first 2 years of life, suggesting that an increased emphasis on prevention and treatment in neonates and children younger than 2 years is crucial • The global burden of incidence and severe disease for both diarrhoea and pneumonia is highest in southeast Asia and Africa.
Key Messages and Discussion • Nearly 1/3 of episodes of severe diarrhoea are preventable by vaccination (i.e., against rotavirus and cholera). • At least 1/3 of severe episodes and 2/3 of deaths are caused by vaccine-preventable pneumonias (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and the influenza virus). • Nearly ¾ of diarrhoea and pneumonia mortality are concentrated in 15 high-burden countries yet data sources from these countries are scant • Undernutrition is a key shared risk factor for morbidity and mortality associated with diarrhoea and pneumonia