Species of Cryptosporidia Causing Subclinical Infection Associated With Growth Faltering in Rural and Urban Bangladesh: A Birth Cohort Study
Kevin L Steiner, Shahnawaz Ahmed, Carol A Gilchrist, Cecelia Burkey, Heather Cook, Jennie Z Ma, Poonum S Korpe, Emtiaz Ahmed, Masud Alam, Mamun Kabir, Fahmida Tofail, Tahmeed Ahmed, Rashidul Haque, William A Petri Jr, Abu S G Faruque, Kevin L Steiner, Shahnawaz Ahmed, Carol A Gilchrist, Cecelia Burkey, Heather Cook, Jennie Z Ma, Poonum S Korpe, Emtiaz Ahmed, Masud Alam, Mamun Kabir, Fahmida Tofail, Tahmeed Ahmed, Rashidul Haque, William A Petri Jr, Abu S G Faruque
Abstract
Background: Cryptosporidiosis is a major cause of childhood diarrhea in low- and middle-income countries and has been linked to impairment of child growth. This study investigated the burden of cryptosporidiosis and its impact on child growth in both a rural and an urban site in Bangladesh.
Methods: Pregnant women in the second trimester were identified at 2 sites in Bangladesh, 1 urban and 1 rural. Their offspring were enrolled at birth into the study (urban, n = 250; rural, n = 258). For 2 years, the children were actively monitored for diarrhea and anthropometric measurements were obtained every 3 months. Stool samples were collected monthly and during diarrheal episodes with Cryptosporidium infection and causative species determined by quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays.
Results: Cryptosporidium infections were common at both sites and mostly subclinical. In the urban site, 161 (64%) children were infected and 65 (26%) had ≥2 infections. In the rural site, 114 (44%) were infected and 24 (9%) had multiple infections. Adjusted for potential confounders, cryptosporidiosis was associated with a significantly greater drop in the length-for-age z score (LAZ) at 24 months from LAZ at enrollment (Δ-LAZ), an effect greatest in the children with multiple episodes of cryptosporidiosis. The most common species in Mirpur was Cryptosporidium hominis, whereas Cryptosporidium meleagridis predominated in Mirzapur.
Conclusions: Cryptosporidiosis is common in early childhood and associated with early growth faltering in Bangladeshi children. Predominant Cryptosporidium species differed between the 2 sites, suggesting different exposures or modes of transmission but similar consequences for child growth.
Clinical trials registration: NCT02764918.
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Source: PubMed