Environmental Surveillance as a Tool for Identifying High-risk Settings for Typhoid Transmission

Author:

Andrews Jason R1ORCID,Yu Alexander T1,Saha Senjuti2,Shakya Jivan3,Aiemjoy Kristen1,Horng Lily1,Qamar Farah4,Garrett Denise5,Baker Stephen6,Saha Samir2,Luby Stephen P1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA

2. Child Health Research Foundation, Department of Microbiology, Dhaka Shishu Hospital, Dhaka, Bangladesh

3. Dhulikhel Hospital, Kathmandu University Hospital, Dhulikhel, Nepal

4. Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Aga Khan University Hospital Karachi, Karachi, Pakistan

5. Sabin Vaccine Institute, Washington, DC, USA

6. Department of Medicine, Cambridge Institute of Therapeutic Immunology & Infectious Disease (CITIID) University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract Enteric fever remains a major cause of morbidity in developing countries with poor sanitation conditions that enable fecal contamination of water distribution systems. Historical evidence has shown that contamination of water systems used for household consumption or agriculture are key transmission routes for Salmonella Typhi and Salmonella Paratyphi A. The World Health Organization now recommends that typhoid conjugate vaccines (TCV) be used in settings with high typhoid incidence; consequently, governments face a challenge regarding how to prioritize typhoid against other emerging diseases. A key issue is the lack of typhoid burden data in many low- and middle-income countries where TCV could be deployed. Here we present an argument for utilizing environmental sampling for the surveillance of enteric fever organisms to provide data on community-level typhoid risk. Such an approach could complement traditional blood culture-based surveillance or even replace it in settings where population-based clinical surveillance is not feasible. We review historical studies characterizing the transmission of enteric fever organisms through sewage and water, discuss recent advances in the molecular detection of typhoidal Salmonella in the environment, and outline challenges and knowledge gaps that need to be addressed to establish environmental sampling as a tool for generating actionable data that can inform public health responses to enteric fever.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Stanford University Center for Innovation in Global Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

Reference51 articles.

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3. Phase 3 efficacy analysis of a typhoid conjugate vaccine trial in Nepal;Shakya;N Engl J Med,2019

4. Typhoid vaccines: WHO position paper – March 2018;World Health Organization,2018

5. Comparative accuracy of typhoid diagnostic tools: a Bayesian latent-class network analysis;Arora;PLoS Negl Trop Dis,2019

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