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<i>Salmonella</i> Typhi Shedding and Household Transmission by Children With Blood Culture-Confirmed Typhoid Fever in Vellore, South India

Manikandan Srinivasan, Kulandaipalayam Natarajan Sindhu, Sidhartha Giri, Nirmal Kumar, Venkata Raghava Mohan, Nicholas C. Grassly, Gagandeep Kang

2021The Journal of Infectious Diseases20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Children suffer the highest burden of the typhoid fever, with a considerable proportion shedding Salmonella Typhi in stool, potentially resulting in transmission of S Typhi. METHODS: We enrolled 70 children with blood culture-confirmed typhoid fever (index cases), from 63 households, during community-based fever surveillance in India. The index cases and their household contacts were followed up with stool samples at multiple time points over 3 weeks and 1 week, respectively. S Typhi was detected using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS: Fifteen of 70 (21.4%) children with culture-confirmed typhoid fever shed S Typhi in stool after onset of fever. Ten of 15 children shed S Typhi for a median of 11.5 (range, 3-61) days from the day of completion of antibiotics. Of 172 household contacts from 56 of the 63 index case households, 12 (7%) contacts in 11 (19.6%) households had S Typhi in stool. Five of the 12 contacts who were shedding S Typhi were asymptomatic, whereas 7 reported recent fever. CONCLUSIONS: One in 5 children with typhoid fever shed S Typhi, with shedding persisting even after antibiotics. One in 5 households had at least 1 contact of the child shedding S Typhi, highlighting potential concurrent typhoid infections in households in settings with poor water and sanitation.

Topics & Concepts

Typhoid feverSalmonella typhiBlood cultureEnteric feverMedicineSalmonellaVirologyTransmission (telecommunications)Intestinal infectious diseasesParatyphoid feverMicrobiologyImmunologyBiologyBacteriaAntibioticsBiochemistryEscherichia coliElectrical engineeringGeneticsGeneEngineeringSalmonella and Campylobacter epidemiologyFecal contamination and water qualityVibrio bacteria research studies