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Household transmission of $\textit{Neisseria meningitidis}$ in the African meningitis belt: a longitudinal cohort study

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

MenAfriCar Consortium 

Abstract

Background Information on transmission of meningococcal infection in the African meningitis belt is scarce. We aimed to describe transmission patterns of Neisseria meningitidis (meningococcus) in households in the African meningitis belt.

Methods Cross-sectional carriage surveys were done in seven African meningitis belt countries (Chad, Ethiopia, Ghana, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, and Senegal) between Aug 1, 2010, and Oct 15, 2012. Meningococcal carriers identified in these surveys and all available people in their households were recruited into this longitudinal cohort study. We took pharyngeal swabs at first visit and took further swabs twice a month for 2 months and then monthly for a further 4 months. We used conventional bacteriological and molecular techniques to identify and characterise meningococci. We estimated the rates of carriage acquisition and recovery using a multi-state Markov model.

Findings Meningococci were isolated from 241 (25%) of 980 members of 133 households in which a carrier had been identified in the cross-sectional survey or at the first household visit. Carriage was detected subsequently in another household member who was not an index carrier in 75 households. Transmission within a household, suggested by detection of a further carrier with the same strain as the index carrier, was found in 52 of these 75 households. Children younger than 5 years were the group that most frequently acquired carriage from other household members. The overall individual acquisition rate was 2·4% (95% CI 1·6–4·0) per month, varying by age and household carriage status. The mean duration of carriage was 3·4 months (95% CI 2·7–4·4).

Interpretation In the African meningitis belt, transmission of meningococci within households is important, particularly for young children, and periods of carriage are usually of short duration.

Description

Keywords

household, transmission, $\textit{Neisseria meningitidis}$, Africa

Journal Title

The Lancet Global Health

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2214-109X
2214-109X

Volume Title

4

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (via London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) (ITDCVT64: UCAM)
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust