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Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems

The World Health Organization (WHO) currently coordinates rotavirus diarrhea and invasive bacterial disease (IBD) surveillance at 178 sentinel sites in 60 countries. However, only 78 sites participate in both surveillance systems using a common sentinel site. Here, we explored the feasibility of ext...

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Autores principales: Tanmoy, Arif Mohammad, Ahmed, ASM Nawshad Uddin, Arumugam, Rajesh, Hossain, Belal, Marzan, Mahfuza, Saha, Shampa, Arifeen, Shams El, Baqui, Abdullah H., Black, Robert E., Kang, Gagandeep, Saha, Samir Kumar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4838211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27096958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0153582
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author Tanmoy, Arif Mohammad
Ahmed, ASM Nawshad Uddin
Arumugam, Rajesh
Hossain, Belal
Marzan, Mahfuza
Saha, Shampa
Arifeen, Shams El
Baqui, Abdullah H.
Black, Robert E.
Kang, Gagandeep
Saha, Samir Kumar
author_facet Tanmoy, Arif Mohammad
Ahmed, ASM Nawshad Uddin
Arumugam, Rajesh
Hossain, Belal
Marzan, Mahfuza
Saha, Shampa
Arifeen, Shams El
Baqui, Abdullah H.
Black, Robert E.
Kang, Gagandeep
Saha, Samir Kumar
author_sort Tanmoy, Arif Mohammad
collection PubMed
description The World Health Organization (WHO) currently coordinates rotavirus diarrhea and invasive bacterial disease (IBD) surveillance at 178 sentinel sites in 60 countries. However, only 78 sites participate in both surveillance systems using a common sentinel site. Here, we explored the feasibility of extending a WHO-IBD surveillance platform to generate data on the burden of rotaviral diarrhea and its epidemiological characteristics to prepare the countries to measure the impact of rotaviral vaccine. A six-month (July to December, 2012) surveillance, managed by IBD team, collected stool samples and clinical data from under-five children with acute watery diarrhea at an IBD sentinel site. Samples were tested for rotavirus antigen by ELISA and genotyped by PCR at the regional reference laboratory (RRL). Specimens were collected from 79% (n = 297) of eligible cases (n = 375); 100% of which were tested for rotavirus by ELISA and 54% (159/297) of them were positive. At RRL, all the cases were confirmed by PCR and genotyped (99%; 158/159). The typing results revealed the predominance of G12 (40%; 64/159) genotype, followed by G1 (31%; 50/159) and G9 (19%; 31/159). All in all, this exploratory surveillance collected the desired demographic and epidemiological data and achieved almost all the benchmark indicators of WHO, starting from enrollment number to quality assurance through a number of case detection, collection, and testing of specimens and genotyping of strains at RRL. The success of this WHO-IBD site in achieving these benchmark indicators of WHO can be used by WHO as a proof-of-concept for considering integration of rotavirus surveillance with WHO-IBD platforms, specifically in countries with well performing IBD site and no ongoing rotavirus surveillance.
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spelling pubmed-48382112016-04-29 Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems Tanmoy, Arif Mohammad Ahmed, ASM Nawshad Uddin Arumugam, Rajesh Hossain, Belal Marzan, Mahfuza Saha, Shampa Arifeen, Shams El Baqui, Abdullah H. Black, Robert E. Kang, Gagandeep Saha, Samir Kumar PLoS One Research Article The World Health Organization (WHO) currently coordinates rotavirus diarrhea and invasive bacterial disease (IBD) surveillance at 178 sentinel sites in 60 countries. However, only 78 sites participate in both surveillance systems using a common sentinel site. Here, we explored the feasibility of extending a WHO-IBD surveillance platform to generate data on the burden of rotaviral diarrhea and its epidemiological characteristics to prepare the countries to measure the impact of rotaviral vaccine. A six-month (July to December, 2012) surveillance, managed by IBD team, collected stool samples and clinical data from under-five children with acute watery diarrhea at an IBD sentinel site. Samples were tested for rotavirus antigen by ELISA and genotyped by PCR at the regional reference laboratory (RRL). Specimens were collected from 79% (n = 297) of eligible cases (n = 375); 100% of which were tested for rotavirus by ELISA and 54% (159/297) of them were positive. At RRL, all the cases were confirmed by PCR and genotyped (99%; 158/159). The typing results revealed the predominance of G12 (40%; 64/159) genotype, followed by G1 (31%; 50/159) and G9 (19%; 31/159). All in all, this exploratory surveillance collected the desired demographic and epidemiological data and achieved almost all the benchmark indicators of WHO, starting from enrollment number to quality assurance through a number of case detection, collection, and testing of specimens and genotyping of strains at RRL. The success of this WHO-IBD site in achieving these benchmark indicators of WHO can be used by WHO as a proof-of-concept for considering integration of rotavirus surveillance with WHO-IBD platforms, specifically in countries with well performing IBD site and no ongoing rotavirus surveillance. Public Library of Science 2016-04-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4838211/ /pubmed/27096958 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0153582 Text en © 2016 Tanmoy et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tanmoy, Arif Mohammad
Ahmed, ASM Nawshad Uddin
Arumugam, Rajesh
Hossain, Belal
Marzan, Mahfuza
Saha, Shampa
Arifeen, Shams El
Baqui, Abdullah H.
Black, Robert E.
Kang, Gagandeep
Saha, Samir Kumar
Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems
title Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems
title_full Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems
title_fullStr Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems
title_full_unstemmed Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems
title_short Rotavirus Surveillance at a WHO-Coordinated Invasive Bacterial Disease Surveillance Site in Bangladesh: A Feasibility Study to Integrate Two Surveillance Systems
title_sort rotavirus surveillance at a who-coordinated invasive bacterial disease surveillance site in bangladesh: a feasibility study to integrate two surveillance systems
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4838211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27096958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0153582
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