Encephalitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Threat of Infectious Encephalitis in Southeast Asia: SouthEast Asia Encephalitis Project
Encephalitis, an acute inflammation of the central nervous system associated with neurologic
dysfunction is of public health concern worldwide, because of its high mortality and
neurological sequelae rates. In Asia where many of the possible etiologies are of major
public health concerns (i.e. dengue, Japanese encephalitis, West Nile virus, EV71), acute
encephalitis is among the most frequent and severe causes of pediatric hospitalization.
Despite extensive microbiological investigations, no pathogen is identified for a significant
proportion of encephalitis patients in both industrialized and developing countries (28-85%
of cases remain unconfirmed). Unknown and sometimes new emerging infectious agents may be
responsible for cases of currently unknown etiology and an intensive effort to identify and
characterize them is to be done. From this perspective, the Southeast Asian region, a
particularly significant biodiversity hotspot, is at high risk for new pathogen emergence.
Surveillance and diagnostic capabilities for encephalitis remain poor and still suffer from
serious shortcomings in most Southeast Asian countries and beyond. Although the burden of
non-infectious encephalitis in this region remains to be ascertained, the best laboratories
only identify etiological infective agents in less than half of patients. Systematic data
regarding the contribution of these diseases are lacking and to define the burden of these
infections, to describe the full clinical spectrum and characteristics of acute central
nervous system infections, and to develop diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms to improve
patient care.
The proposed project is an ambitious and multidisciplinary research consortium that aims to
reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with infectious encephalitis in Southeast Asia
(Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Myanmar) by improving diagnosis and medical care for patients.
The SEAe project specific objectives are:
- To fill‐in the biomedical knowledge gaps regarding acute encephalitis syndrome;
- To strengthen hospital laboratories capacities to enhance health by improving diagnosis
and care for patients;
- To identify unknown pathogens responsible for encephalitis;
- To provide reliable information and a sustainable regional and sub‐regional surveillance
network to clinicians and public health stakeholders that will help them to better
define prevention policies, vaccination strategy, and build preparedness to emerging
infectious risks.
Background:
Encephalitis is defined as an acute inflammation of the central nervous system associated
with neurologic dysfunction. The most common etiologies are infections by either viruses or
bacteria although parasites and fungi can also be occasionally detected, especially in
immunocompromised patients. Because of high mortality and long-term neurological sequelae,
encephalitis is of public health concern worldwide. Reported incidences range between 3.5 and
7.4 cases per 100,000 patient-years with higher incidences in children than adults. Various
encephalitis outbreaks have recently emerged in Asia such as the fatal outbreak of
enterovirus 71 (EV71) that occurred in mid-2012 in Cambodia affecting very young children
(most below 3 years, all below 12 years). In Asia where many of the possible etiologies are
of major public health concerns (i.e. dengue, Japanese encephalitis, West Nile virus, EV71),
acute encephalitis is among the most frequent and severe causes of pediatric hospitalization.
Despite extensive microbiological investigations and the use of the most advanced molecular
biology-based assays, no pathogen is identified for a significant proportion of encephalitis
patients in both industrialized and developing countries (28-85% of cases remain
unconfirmed). Previous studies support the hypothesis that unknown and sometimes new emerging
infectious agents may be responsible for cases of currently unknown etiology and strongly
argue for an intensive effort to identify and characterize them. This hypothesis is also
strengthened by the recent apparent increase in emerging infectious diseases, many of which
have been linked to human activities that impact the environment and to the spreading of
pathogens to new geographic regions. From this perspective, the Southeast Asian region, a
particularly significant biodiversity hotspot, is at high risk for new pathogen emergence.
Indeed, growing human populations, increasing urbanization and frequent contact with wildlife
and domesticated animals have created novel opportunities for the emergence of pathogens such
as SARS at the end of 2002, and highly facilitated the spread of infectious diseases such as
H5N1 high-pathogenicity avian influenza virus since 2004, and H1N1 pandemic influenza virus
in 2009. The population in developing Southeast Asian countries is particularly at risk for
the circulation of emerging or reemerging infectious agents and for this reason the
surveillance and investigation of acute encephalitis syndrome in this region is of utmost
public health importance, both locally and globally.
Surveillance and diagnostic capabilities for encephalitis remain poor and still suffer from
serious shortcomings in most Southeast Asian countries and beyond. Although the burden of
non-infectious encephalitis in this region remains to be ascertained, the best laboratories
only identify etiological infective agents in less than half of patients. Moreover, because
of the absence of reliable microbiological diagnostic capacity in the majority of public
referral hospitals, local clinicians have to treat acute encephalitis syndromes mostly
empirically, with little evaluation of the effectiveness of their clinical approach. Even if
some of the most common causes of acute encephalitis syndrome may be vaccine-preventable,
systematic data regarding the contribution of these diseases are lacking and no reliable data
are available to define the burden of these infections, to describe the full clinical
spectrum and characteristics of acute central nervous system infections, and to develop
diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms to improve patient care. Besides, whatever the nature
and magnitude of the encephalitis burden in Southeast Asia and the criteria used to assess it
(i.e. morbidity, mortality, handicap, impact on families' budget or livelihood), this burden
is borne principally by underprivileged populations with limited access to prevention and
health care.
Project partners The proposed project is an ambitious and multidisciplinary research
consortium associating: (i) national health authorities in Cambodia, Lao PDR, Vietnam and
Myanmar; (ii) local major university and clinical sites (national hospitals and provincial
health centers); (iii) key French stakeholders of life and health sciences with research
activities carried out in the Southeast Asian region such as: Institut Pasteur and the
Institut Pasteur International Network, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale (Inserm), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le
Développement (Cirad), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD) ‐ Aix‐Marseille
University ‐ Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Santé Publique (EHESP); and (iv) teams from the
Southeast Asian Wellcome Trust Oxford University Major Overseas Programme.
Objectives:
The SEAe project aims to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with infectious
encephalitis in Southeast Asia by improving diagnosis and medical care for patients.
The SEAe project specific objectives are:
- To fill‐in the biomedical knowledge gaps regarding acute encephalitis syndrome;
- To strengthen hospital laboratories capacities to enhance health by improving diagnosis
and care for patients;
- To identify unknown pathogens responsible for encephalitis;
- To document and analyze factors related to clusters of encephalitis cases integrating
human health, animal health and environment through a "One Health" approach;
- To provide reliable information and a sustainable regional and sub‐regional surveillance
network to clinicians and public health stakeholders that will help them to better
define prevention policies, vaccination strategy, and build preparedness to emerging
infectious risks.
Population study: patient with suspected encephalitis hospitalized in in 4 different
Hospitals, Kantha Bopha IV children's Hospital, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, National paediatrics
Hospital, Hanoi, Vietnam and Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Lao PDR, Yangon Children Hospital,
Yangon, Myanmar. Inclusion criteria were adapted from the International Encephalitis
Consortium 2013: all patients should be older than 28 days and presenting an altered mental
status (i.e. confusion or inability to talk, decreased or altered level of consciousness or
personality change) lasting more than 24 hours without alternative cause identified. These
criteria should be associated with at least one of the following: (i) fever (>=38°C axillary)
for less than 72 hours before or after presentation; (ii) seizure (febrile seizure excluded);
(iii) focal neurologic finding.
Data collection:
Clinical data entries are required for this study.
Data entries:
A single data entry person (a medical doctor) enters clinical information and fill in a paper
form at admission, at 24 hours, at discharge and one year after discharge and enter the data
into an OpenClinica (hosted in CIRAD server, Montpellier, France ) anonymized online
database.
Laboratory data is entered into a customized ACCESS (Microsoft database). The results are
entered into dedicated tabs for the different techniques.
A data manager dedicated to the study is in charge of the database. The CIRAD and the
Institut Pasteur share the co-ownership of the database.
First statistical analysis will be performed in Institut Pasteur du Cambodge, Phnom Penh,
under epidemiology unit responsibility. Continuous data will be described with descriptive
statistics, including mean ±SD and/or median (range) as appropriate and categorical data with
frequencies (%). Categorical data will be analyzed by univariate analysis with χ2 or Fisher
exact test as appropriate and continuous data by nonparametric Mann-Whitney test. Statistical
analyses will involve use of R software. Relationships between clinical, biological,
radiological variables, etiologies and outcome will be assessed by using a univariate and
multivariate logistic regression analyses to identify determinants for poor outcome.
Study Calendar
- Provisional inclusion starting date: July 2014
- Provisional inclusion duration: 3 years and half
- Patient participation duration: 1 year
- Study provisional duration: 5 years
- Data archiving duration: 15 years
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