Author:
,Das Manoja Kumar,Arora Narendra Kumar,Gupta Bini,Sharan Apoorva,Aggarwal Mahesh K.,Haldar Pradeep,Zuber Patrick L. F.,Bonhoeffer Jan,Ray Arindam,Wakhlu Ashish,Vyas Bhadresh R.,Bhat Javeed Iqbal,Goswami Jayanta K.,Mathai John,Kameswari K.,Bharadia Lalit,Sankhe Lalit,Ajayakumar M. K.,Mohan Neelam,Jena Pradeep K.,Sarangi Rachita,Shad Rashmi,Debbarma Sanjib K.,Shyamala J.,Ratan Simmi K.,Sarkar Suman,Kumar Vijayendra,Nagender Yoga,Dubey Anand P.,Gupta Atul,Charoo Bashir Ahmad,Tripathy Bikasha Bihary,Sam Cenita J.,Prasad G. Rajendra,Mufti Gowhar Nazir,S. Harish Kumar.,Trivedi Harsh,Shad Jimmy,K. Jothilakshmi.,K. Sharmila.,Lahiri Kaushik,Luthra Meera,Sarkar Nihar Ranjan,P. Padmalatha.,Arunachalam Pavai,Kumar Rakesh,Sarkar Ruchirendu,Mohapatra S. S. G.,A. Santhosh Kumar.,Garge Saurabh,Sahoo Subrat Kumar,Ghosh Sunil K.,Mane Sushant,Maure Christine G.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
India introduced rotavirus vaccines (RVV, monovalent, Rotavac™ and pentavalent, Rotasiil™) in April 2016 with 6, 10 and 14 weeks schedule and expanded countrywide in phases. We describe the epidemiology of intussusception among children aged 2–23 months in India.
Methods
The prospective surveillance at 19 nationally representative sentinel hospitals from four regions recruited children with intussusception from April 2016 to September 2017. Data on sociodemography, immunization, clinical, treatment and outcome were collected. Along with descriptive analysis, key parameters between four regions were compared using Chi-Square/Fisher’s exact/Mann–Whitney U/Kruskal-Wallis tests. The pre- and post-RVV periods were compared to estimate the risk ratios.
Results
Six hundred twenty-one children with intussusception from South (n = 262), East (n = 190), North (n = 136) and West (n = 33) regions were recruited. Majority (n = 465, 74.8%) were infants (40.0% aged 4–7 months) with median age 8 months (IQR 5, 13 months), predominantly males (n = 408, 65.7%) and half (n = 311, 50.0%) occurred during March–June months. A shorter interval between weaning and intussusception was observed for ragi based food (median 1 month, IQR 0–4.2 months) compared to rice (median 4 months, IQR 1–9 months) and wheat (median 3 months, IQR 1–7 months) based food (p < 0.01). Abdominal pain or excessive crying (82.8%), vomiting (72.6%), and bloody stool (58.1%) were the leading symptoms. Classical triad (abdominal pain, vomiting and bloody stool) was observed in 34.8% cases (24.4 to 45.8% across regions). 95.3% of the cases were diagnosed by ultrasound. 49.3% (10.5 to 82.4% across regions) cases were managed by reduction, 39.5% (11.5 to 71.1% across regions) cases underwent surgery and 11.1% spontaneously resolved. Eleven (1.8%) cases died. 89.1% cases met Brighton criteria level 1 and 7.6% met Level 2. RVV was received by 12 cases within 1–21 days prior to intussusception. No increase in case load (RR = 0.44; 95% CI 0.22–1.18) or case ratio (RR = 0.5; 95% CI 0.3–1.2) was observed after RVV introduction in select sites.
Conclusions
Intussusception cases were observed across all sites, although there were variations in cases, presentation and mode of management. The high case load age coincided with age of the RVV third dose. The association with ragi based weaning food in intussusception needs further evaluation.
Funder
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health