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Childhood encephalitis in the Greater Mekong region (the SouthEast Asia Encephalitis Project): A multicentre prospective study

Pommier Jean-David, Gorman Christopher, Crabol Yoann, Bleakley Kevin, Sothy Heng, Santy Ky, Tran Huong Thi Thu, Nguyen Lam Van, Bunnakea Em, Hlaing Chaw Su, Aye Mya Min Aye, Cappelle Julien, Herrant Magali, Piola Patrice, Rosset Bruno, Chevalier Véronique, Tarantola Arnaud, Channa Mey, SEAe Consortium, et al.. 2022. Childhood encephalitis in the Greater Mekong region (the SouthEast Asia Encephalitis Project): A multicentre prospective study. Lancet. Global Health, 10 (7) : e989-e1002.

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Résumé : Background: Encephalitis is a worldwide public health issue, with a substantially high burden among children in southeast Asia. We aimed to determine the causes of encephalitis in children admitted to hospitals across the Greater Mekong region by implementing a comprehensive state-of-the-art diagnostic procedure harmonised across all centres, and identifying clinical characteristics related to patients' conditions. Methods: In this multicentre, observational, prospective study of childhood encephalitis, four referral hospitals in Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar recruited children (aged 28 days to 16 years) who presented with altered mental status lasting more than 24 h and two of the following minor criteria: fever (within the 72 h before or after presentation), one or more generalised or partial seizures (excluding febrile seizures), a new-onset focal neurological deficit, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) white blood cell count of 5 per mL or higher, or brain imaging (CT or MRI) suggestive of lesions of encephalitis. Comprehensive diagnostic procedures were harmonised across all centres, with first-line testing was done on samples taken at inclusion and results delivered within 24 h of inclusion for main treatable causes of disease and second-line testing was done thereafter for mostly non-treatable causes. An independent expert medical panel reviewed the charts and attribution of causes of all the included children. Using multivariate analyses, we assessed risk factors associated with unfavourable outcomes (ie, severe neurological sequelae and death) at discharge using data from baseline and day 2 after inclusion. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04089436, and is now complete. Findings: Between July 28, 2014, and Dec 31, 2017, 664 children with encephalitis were enrolled. Median age was 4·3 years (1·8–8·8), 295 (44%) children were female, and 369 (56%) were male. A confirmed or probable cause of encephalitis was identified in 425 (64%) patients: 216 (33%) of 664 cases were due to Japanese encephalitis virus, 27 (4%) were due to dengue virus, 26 (4%) were due to influenza virus, 24 (4%) were due to herpes simplex virus 1, 18 (3%) were due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, 17 (3%) were due to Streptococcus pneumoniae, 17 (3%) were due to enterovirus A71, 74 (9%) were due to other pathogens, and six (1%) were due to autoimmune encephalitis. Diagnosis was made within 24 h of admission to hospital for 83 (13%) of 664 children. 119 (18%) children had treatable conditions and 276 (42%) had conditions that could have been preventable by vaccination. At time of discharge, 153 (23%) of 664 children had severe neurological sequelae and 83 (13%) had died. In multivariate analyses, risk factors for unfavourable outcome were diagnosis of M tuberculosis infection upon admission (odds ratio 3·23 [95% CI 1·04–10·03]), coma on day 2 (2·90 [1·78–4·72]), supplementary oxygen requirement (1·89 [1·25–2·86]), and more than 1 week duration between symptom onset and admission to hospital (3·03 [1·68–5·48]). At 1 year after inclusion, of 432 children who were discharged alive from hospital with follow-up data, 24 (5%) had died, 129 (30%) had neurological sequelae, and 279 (65%) had completely recovered.

Mots-clés Agrovoc : encéphalite, enfant, hôpital, enquête, diagnostic, analyse multivariée, agent infectieux, agent pathogène, survie, évolution, collecte de données

Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Mékong, Asie du Sud-Est, Cambodge, Viet Nam, République démocratique populaire lao, Myanmar

Classification Agris : S50 - Santé humaine

Champ stratégique Cirad : CTS 4 (2019-) - Santé des plantes, des animaux et des écosystèmes

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Pommier Jean-David, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge (KHM) - auteur correspondant
  • Gorman Christopher, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge (KHM) - auteur correspondant
  • Crabol Yoann, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge (KHM) - auteur correspondant
  • Bleakley Kevin, Université Paris-Saclay (FRA)
  • Sothy Heng, Kantha Bopha Hospital (KHM)
  • Santy Ky, Kantha Bopha Hospital (KHM)
  • Tran Huong Thi Thu, National Children's Hospital (VNM)
  • Nguyen Lam Van, National Children's Hospital (VNM)
  • Bunnakea Em, Kantha Bopha Hospital (KHM)
  • Hlaing Chaw Su, Yangon Children's Hospital (MMR)
  • Aye Mya Min Aye, Yangon Children's Hospital (MMR)
  • Cappelle Julien, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR ASTRE (FRA) ORCID: 0000-0001-7668-1971
  • Herrant Magali, Institut Pasteur (FRA)
  • Piola Patrice, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge (KHM)
  • Rosset Bruno, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR ASTRE (FRA)
  • Chevalier Véronique, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR ASTRE (KHM)
  • Tarantola Arnaud, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge (KHM)
  • Channa Mey, Institut Pasteur du Cambodge (KHM)
  • SEAe Consortium
  • et al.

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/601216/)

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