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Nutritional epidemiology and public health |
1 From the Kenyan Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) Centre for Geographic Medicine Research (coast), Kilifi, Kenya (PB, SM, IM, SHA, FO, NP, KM, CRN, and JAB); the Nuffield Department of Medicine, Centre for Clinical Vaccinology and Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom, (PB, SHA, and JAB); the Department of Paediatrics and Wellcome Trust Centre for Clinical Tropical Medicine, Imperial College, London, United Kingdom (KM); and the Institute of Child Health, University College, London, United Kingdom (CRN)
2 This paper is published with the permission of the director of the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI). 3 Supported by KEMRI and the Wellcome Trust. JB, CRN, and PB are supported by the Wellcome Trust. 5 Reprints not available. Address correspondence to P Bejon, KEMRI Centre for Geographic Medicine Research, PO Box 230, Kilifi 80108, Kenya. E-mail: pbejon{at}kilifi.kemri-wellcome.org.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: We determined the malnutrition-attributable fractions among children admitted to a rural district hospital in Kenya, among inpatient deaths and among children with the major causes of severe disease.
Design: We analyzed data from children between 6 and 60 mo of age, comprising 13 307 admissions, 674 deaths, 3068 admissions with severe disease, and 562 community controls by logistic regression, using anthropometric z scores as the independent variable and admission or death as the outcome, to calculate the probability of admission as a result of "true malnutrition" for individual cases. Probabilities were averaged to calculate attributable fractions.
Results: Z scores < –3 were insensitive for malnutrition-attributable deaths and admissions, and no single threshold was both specific and sensitive. The overall malnutrition-attributable fraction for in-hospital deaths was 51% (95% CI: 42%, 61%) with midupper arm circumference. Similar malnutrition-attributable fractions were seen for the major causes of severe disease (severe malaria, gastroenteritis, lower respiratory tract infection, HIV, and invasive bacterial disease).
Conclusions: Despite global improvements, malnutrition still underlies half of the inpatient morbidity and mortality rates among children in rural Kenya. This contribution is underestimated by using conventional clinical definitions of severe malnutrition.
| INTRODUCTION |
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However, data from case-control studies can be used in logistic regression models to calculate attributable fractions, which indicate the percentage of all cases linked to the risk factor studied. This approach was widely used to calculate malaria-attributable fractions (7, 8) and was applied to mortality data in conjunction with anthropometric cross-sectional surveys of the community in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia acquired >20 y ago (9-12). Those studies found high estimates of malnutrition-attributable death, ranging from 30% to 50% of childhood deaths. However, recent global improvements in nutrition have been seen (13), and this is thought to have reduced the estimated global attributable fractions to 14–19% of all childhood deaths (2).
We apply the logistic regression approach to indicate the risk of death or hospital admission secondary to malnutrition, using a recent data set collected in a rural hospital in Kenya. We examine the contribution malnutrition makes to all admissions and inpatient death and to the following clinical presentations: severe malaria, lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), gastroenteritis, and invasive bacterial disease.
| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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240 000 people, who mainly belong to the Mijikenda group and are rural farmers. Approval for this study was given by the Kenyan Medical Research Institute National Ethics Committee, and procedures were in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975 as revised in 1983.
Clinical and laboratory methods
From 1 August 1998 to 30 July 2002 we prospectively collected standardized clinical, anthropometric, and laboratory data on all children admitted to the pediatric wards [described in detail elsewhere (14)]. Midupper arm circumference (MUAC) was measured from 1 October 1999. Children were weighed on admission with the use of an electronic scale (Weylux; H Fereday and Sons, London, United Kingdom). In children <2 y old, length was measured with the use of a measuring board of standard design. Height was measured by a wall-mounted scale for children >2 y old. Weight-for-age z score (WAZ), height-for-age z score (HAZ), weigh-for-height z score (WHZ), and MUAC-for-age z score were calculated with the use of the current World Health Organization reference standards as supplied in the "igrowup" STATA package (Stata Corp, College Station, TX). Children with kwashiorkor [defined as bilateral pedal edema with typical skin and hair changes (15)] were considered to have severe malnutrition, and WAZ and WHZ were not calculated. Data from children between 6 mo and 5 y of age were analyzed in this study.
Complete blood counts were performed with the use of an automated counter (Beckman Coulter, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom). Severe anemia was defined as hemoglobin < 50 g/L. Thick and thin blood smear was stained with 10% Giemsa and examined at x1000 magnification for asexual forms of Plasmodium falciparum, and results were expressed per microliter with the use of the automated red and white cell indexes.
Blood was aerobically cultured for pathogenic bacteria (BACTEC; Becton Dickinson and Co, Franklin Lakes, NJ) as previously described (14). Lumbar puncture was guided by a clinical protocol (16). Meningitis was defined as a positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) culture, a positive CSF latex agglutination test, bacteria seen on CSF Gram stain, or a CSF leukocyte count > 50 cells/µL. HIV infection was determined at the end of the study with the use of stored plasma samples. These samples were tested without the immediate availability of any personal identifiers, but results were subsequently linked to clinical data identified by a serial number only. Samples were systematically collected for all admissions with an invasive bacterial infection and all admissions after 1 October 1999 with the use of enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay. Polymerase chain reaction was used to confirm HIV infection in children < 18 mo of age.
Severe disease was defined as coma (Blantyre coma score < 3), respiratory distress (deep breathing), severe anemia (blood hemoglobin concentration < 50 g/L), prostration, or
2 seizures in 24 h. These features were used to define severe malaria (17), but they can be used to define severe illness of any cause (18, 19). Within this group, LRTI was defined by the clinician's diagnosis, gastroenteritis was defined by
3 loose stools in 24 h, meningitis and bacteremia were defined by laboratory studies (14, 16), and severe malaria required >2500 parasites/µL blood with one of the features of severe disease given above.
Clinical management
Children were managed on the 35-bed general pediatric ward and 6-bed high-dependency ward. Medical care was provided according to a standardized protocol, with research clinicians providing 24-h coverage for high-dependency and general ward areas (14). Children whose condition was diagnosed as severe malnutrition received stabilization and rehabilitation care according to current guidelines from the World Health Organization (15).
Community survey data
An age- and location-matched community control was found for each child admitted with bacteremia. They were recruited within 1 week of presentation of the case of bacteremia. Children were examined for kwashiorkor, weighed, and measured. Z scores for height, weight, and MUAC were calculated as for admitted children. The distribution of ages and locations are given for controls and admitted children in Table 1
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where p is the probability of admission or death, x is the z score,and
is the power function of the z score which maximizes the likelihood estimation. Allowing the power function (
) to vary is necessary because the relation between risk and the linear z score may not fit a logistic regression model. If it does not, the logistic regression model would constrain children with moderate malnutrition to be ascribed a risk proportionate to children with severe malnutrition. Allowing a power function means that the model could indicate a slight increase in risk in moderate malnutrition, with an abrupt increase in risk with severe malnutrition, if that was a better fit for the data.
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| RESULTS |
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Sensitivity and specificity
The sensitivities and specificities for MUAC-for-age z score, WHZ, HAZ, and WAZ are shown by z score in Figure 1
. For these variables, a z score of
–3 was an insensitive definition for malnutrition-associated admissions and deaths. The sensitivities for admission ranged from 14% to 61%. For malnutrition-attributable deaths, the sensitivities ranged from 32% to 52% (ie, using z score < –3 would have excluded 48–68% of the deaths attributable to malnutrition).
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Attributable fractions
Overall (including children with kwashiorkor), the attributable fractions for malnutrition were 11–41% for admissions, and 28–51% for deaths (Figure 2
). The malnutrition-attributable fractions for deaths, but not for admissions, appeared to be lower among older children (Table 2
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The attributable fractions increased with lower z scores but did not reach 100% even for the group with z score < –3, with attributable fractions ranging from 44% to 80% for admissions and from 55% to 81% for deaths. Markers of wasting (MUAC, WHZ) had high specificity at z score < –3, but markers of stunting (HAZ) did not (data not tabulated; Figure 2
).
Subgroup analysis by concomitant diagnoses
The effect of concomitant comorbidity was studied on a well-characterized subgroup of children who had signs or symptoms of severe disease on admission, for whom full clinical data were available. This subgroup included 3068 of the original 13 307 admissions. The CIs for estimates based on HAZ were wider than those based on MUAC-for-age z score, WAZ, and WHZ, and so estimates for malnutrition-attributable fractions among severely unwell children in Table 2
are based on MUAC-for-age z score, WAZ, and WHZ. Estimates of attributable fractions among severe admissions were higher than the estimates for all admissions and were comparable to the attributable fractions estimated for malnutrition-associated deaths (Table 2
). Although there is a tendency for gastroenteritis and severe malaria to have higher malnutrition-attributable fractions than LRTI, bacteremia, and meningitis, the CIs are wider than these differences.
HIV
Systematic HIV testing was done for all children with severe disease admitted between 1 October 1999 and 30 July 2002. During this period, an HIV status was available for 1755 of 1918 admissions, and full anthropometry was available for 1343 of these children. Two hundred eleven (15.7%) were positive. The contribution of HIV was assessed by examining the malnutrition- attributable fractions among children with HIV infection and comparing these results with children known to be HIV uninfected (Table 2
). There were too few HIV-uninfected children with bacteremia or meningitis to allow subgroup analysis. However, the malnutrition-attributable fractions among HIV-uninfected children with gastroenteritis, LRTI, and malaria were similar to the fractions among HIV-infected children.
| DISCUSSION |
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The cases we use for calculating attributable fractions are inpatient admissions and inpatient deaths. Most children with acute illnesses are treated in the community without hospital referral, and the majority of deaths occur without hospital admission (23). Because socioeconomic status influences both the likelihood of admission during an acute illness and nutritional intake, the attributable fractions presented here may be an underestimate. To address this would require longitudinal follow-up of a large number of children recruited in the community, so as to avoid the bias inherent in hospital admission.
Furthermore, malnutrition and infection may have a circular relation in causality (24), and episodes of malaria may precede growth faltering (25). However, in considering the acute event, it seems more likely that the direction of causality is from malnutrition to the acutely acquired infection precipitating hospital admission, irrespective of the original causality of the child's malnutrition. An important exception is HIV, which causes both infection and malnutrition. However, in subgroup analyses we obtained similar results in HIV-positive and -negative children, suggesting that confounding from chronic HIV did not explain the high malnutrition-attributable fractions we found.
Our attributable fractions are comparable to those found with data acquired 20 y ago, ranging from 30–60% of deaths in Senegal (12) to 55% in Asia and Tanzania (9). Those other studies also found variation in estimates according to the anthropometric measurement used in analysis. It is striking that our data are comparable to those obtained 20 y, because a recent analysis of pooled global data suggest the situation is improving. Only 14–19% of deaths were attributed to malnutrition, having fallen from 35% only a few years previously (2). This may reflect global improvements in nutrition (13). However, nutrition does not appear to be improving in East Africa since 1980, at least as indicated by markers of stunting (13). Although our attributable fractions are calculated primarily from markers of wasting rather than stunting, the international trend over time in both measures is probably similar. Our data, from a poor, rural community in Kenya, probably reflect the situation where improvements in nutrition have not occurred. The global improvements in nutrition may be encouraging, but substantial inequalities probably underlie the summary figures.
We fit a power function to the z scores used in our study. This is important, because a logistic model would otherwise constrain the risk at a z score of –1 to be proportionate to the risk at a z score of –3. However, it is biologically plausible that z scores at –3 might be strongly associated with death, but z scores at –1 only weakly so or not at all. Using a power function allows the line linking risk to z score to vary in shape according to the data. Without this, the attributable fractions estimated would probably be accurate at low z scores but overestimated at intermediate z scores. However, despite using a power function, there were high malnutrition-attributable fractions among children dying with mild and moderate wasting.
Children presenting to outpatient departments may be more likely to be admitted if they have obvious signs of malnutrition. This could increase the malnutrition-attributable fraction even without a biological link between disease and malnutrition. However, because the malnutrition-attributable fractions for death and severe disease (calculated from admissions only) are considerably higher than those for all admissions, it seems unlikely that the high attributable fractions relate to unnecessary admissions.
Our data suggest that malnutrition is still a major contributor for the major causes of childhood death in rural Kenya, despite recent global improvements in health. Most of the direct causes for admission that were attributable to malnutrition were infectious diseases, which were then recorded as the primary diagnoses by clinicians. The mechanisms by which malnutrition predisposes to infection were recently reviewed (24). It is possible that associated micronutrient deficiencies were important, but no biochemical data on these are available to us.
Targeted interventions exist to reduce death from malaria with insecticide-treated nets (26) or intermittent presumptive treatment (27), pneumococcal vaccine to prevent LRTI (28), and oral rehydration solution (29) and rotavirus vaccine (30) to prevent death from gastroenteritis. However, these data suggest that malnutrition is a common predisposing factor, and interventions that reduce malnutrition will reduce deaths from all these causes.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The author's responsibilities were as follows—PB, SHA, and JAB: designed the analysis plan; PB: did the analysis; SM, NP, IM, FO, KM, JAB, and CRN: conducted the clinical work and provided data; PB, SHA, KM, CRN, and JAB: contributed to writing the final manuscript. None of the authors had a personal or financial conflict of interest.
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