Defining severe shigellosis in the enterics for global health study: A comparison of leading diarrhea severity definitions among children with Shigella diarrhea

Document Type

Article

Department

Paediatrics and Child Health

Abstract

Background: Shigella has high global burden and serious long-term outcomes among young children. Increasing antibiotic resistance makes Shigella vaccine development a critical priority. Choosing the optimal clinical efficacy endpoint for Shigella vaccine trials requires comparing existing diarrhea severity definitions among children with Shigella.
Methods: Six- to 35-month-old children presenting to a clinic with diarrhea were enrolled in Bangladesh, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Pakistan, Peru, and The Gambia. Among children with Shigella, six dichotomized diarrhea severity definitions (GEMS moderate-to-severe diarrhea (MSD), Modified Vesikari Score (MVS), MVS +/- dysentery, Clark score, MAL-ED score, and Shigella mortality score) were examined against two outcomes: change in length/height-for-age z-score (ΔLAZ/HAZ) from enrollment to three-month follow-up and death or hospitalization within fourteen days of enrollment. We compared the performance of each severity score to predict outcomes using linear regression, measures of diagnostic accuracy, and Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves.
Results: Among 1,968 children with Shigella, moderate or severe diarrhea was negatively associated with ΔLAZ/HAZ by three definitions: MVS (-0.07 z-score, 95% CI -0.10 to -0.03), MVS +/- dysentery (-0.05, 95% CI -0.09 to -0.02), and MAL-ED score (-0.04, 95% CI -0.07 to 0.00). GEMS MSD (93.6%), MAL-ED (87.2%), MVS +/- dysentery (85.1%), and MVS (80.9%) had high sensitivity in predicting death or hospitalization, while Shigella mortality had the largest area under the curve (91.0).
Conclusions: MVS, MVS +/- dysentery, and the MAL-ED score identified adverse outcomes following Shigella diarrhea, indicating that they are viable options for a Shigella vaccine trial case definition.

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Volume and issue number is not provided by the author/publisher.

AKU Student

no

Publication (Name of Journal)

The Journal of Infectious Diseases

DOI

10.1093/infdis/jiaf630

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