Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T19:54:01.509Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Associations between enteric pathogen carriage and height-for-age, weight-for-age and weight-for-height in children under 5 years old in urban Dhaka, Bangladesh

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2020

David Berendes*
Affiliation:
Division of Foodborne, Waterborne, and Environmental Diseases, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
Drew Capone
Affiliation:
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
Jackie Knee
Affiliation:
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
David Holcomb
Affiliation:
Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
Sonia Sultana
Affiliation:
International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b), Dhaka, Bangladesh
Amy J. Pickering
Affiliation:
School of Engineering, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA
Joe Brown
Affiliation:
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
*
Author for correspondence: David Berendes, E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Nutritional factors and infectious agents may contribute to paediatric growth deficits in low- and middle-income countries; however, the contribution of enteric pathogens is only beginning to be understood. We analysed the stool from children <5 years old from an open cohort, cluster-randomised controlled trial of a point-of-collection water chlorinator in urban Bangladesh. We compared the presence/absence of 15 enteric pathogens detected via multiplex, molecular methods in the stool with concurrent Z-scores/Z-score cut-offs (−2 standard deviations (s.d.)) for height-for-age (HAZ/stunting), weight-for-age (WAZ/underweight) and weight-for-height (WHZ/wasting), adjusted for sociodemographic and trial-related factors, and measured caregiver-reported diarrhoea. Enteric pathogen prevalence in the stool was high (88% had ≥1 enteric pathogen, most commonly Giardia spp. (40%), Salmonella enterica (33%), enterotoxigenic E. coli (28%) and Shigella spp. (27%)) while reported 7-day diarrhoea prevalence was 6%, suggesting high subclinical infection rates. Many children were stunted (26%) or underweight (24%). Adjusted models suggested Giardia spp. detection was associated with lower HAZ (−0.22 s.d., 95% CI −0.44 to 0.00; prevalence ratio for stunting: 1.39, 95% CI 0.94–2.06) and potentially lower WAZ. No pathogens were associated with reported diarrhoea in adjusted models. Giardia spp. carriage may be associated with growth faltering, but not diarrhoea, in this and similar low-income settings. Stool-based enteric pathogen detection provides a direct indication of previous exposure that may be useful as a broader endpoint of trials of environmental interventions.

Type
Original Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Almost 27% of the world's preschool children are stunted (defined specifically as height-for-age Z-scores ⩽2 standard deviations below the mean), with hundreds of millions more underweight (low weight-for-age) or wasted (low weight-for-height), especially in low- and middle-income countries [Reference De Onis, Blössner and Borghi1, Reference Abarca-Gómez2]. Beyond the poor nutrition that characterises many diets in these settings, the role of recurrent or persistent enteric infections in undernutrition, and especially linear growth faltering (defined as any low height-for-age), is incompletely understood [Reference Millward3, Reference Rogawski4]. These enteric infections may elicit inflammatory immune responses that can lead to chronic gut inflammation, and subsequent morphological changes, reduced absorptive capacity for nutrients and other sequelae [Reference Crane, Jones and Berkley5]. This condition, termed environmental enteric dysfunction (EED), expands the scope of potential health impacts associated with enteric infections to include subclinical infections that contribute to gut inflammation without the presence of diarrhoea [Reference Prado6].

While the diarrhoeal disease affects more than 1.7 billion children worldwide each year [7], the burden of enteric infections – inclusive of asymptomatic infections – is even larger, especially in young children [Reference Kotloff8Reference Knee10]. A multisite cohort study of both non-diarrhoeal and diarrhoeal stool from children <2 years old – when impacts of environmental conditions on linear growth, may be most important [Reference Victora11] – observed that more than two-thirds of the children were shedding an enteric pathogen in the stool, indicative of current or previous infection or asymptomatic carriage [Reference Platts-Mills9]. Notably, while about 77% of diarrhoeal stool was positive for ≥1 enteric pathogen, 65% of non-diarrhoeal stool was also positive across sites [Reference Platts-Mills9]. The prevalence of bacterial, viral and protozoan infections varies by region and age range [Reference Kotloff8, Reference Platts-Mills9], and thus infection-related drivers of growth faltering may also vary, making contextualisation of the local burden of enteric infection important [Reference Kosek12].

Although environmental interventions focused on reducing exposures to faecal pathogens – for example, improved water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) infrastructure – have typically been evaluated by their effectiveness in reducing diarrhoea [Reference Wolf13], recognition of the potential impact of subclinical infections is broadening the focus of such studies to target both symptomatic and asymptomatic enteric infections [Reference Brown14]. By extension, the impact of interventions on linear growth and other nutritional outcomes is being measured. Two studies have already reported significant effects of improved community-level sanitation on linear growth in the absence of measurable effects on diarrhoea [Reference Pickering15, Reference Reese16], but other major randomised-controlled trials have not observed such outcomes [Reference Luby17Reference Humphrey19]. The challenges and expenses of discerning and interpreting the pathogen-specific biological and environmental pathways through which EED acts [Reference Harper20] have resulted in the limited analysis of pathogens and child growth. However, recently-completed multisite studies may add to these results in the near future [Reference Luby17, Reference Null18].

As WASH implementers strive to impact not only faecal pathogen exposures but also linear growth, it is important to understand the roles and burdens (e.g. background circulation) of specific pathogens. This importance is twofold: (1) enteric pathogens may be aetiological agents of symptomatic illness with short-term impacts; and perhaps more importantly, (2) those same enteric pathogens may also be the cause of asymptomatic infection or be commensally carried in the gut, resulting in longer-term impacts [Reference Rogawski4]. Pathogen-specific approaches are likely not the long-term solution to controlling enteric infections – many enteric pathogens share transmission pathways and may be controlled via system-level improvements in WASH infrastructure [Reference Luby21]. However, improved understanding of pathogen- and pathway-specific contributions to poor nutrition in low-income settings can inform intervention strategies, exposure measurement and risk assessment [Reference Cumming and Cairncross22]. Within the context of a cluster-randomised controlled trial of an automated point-of-collection water chlorination device in urban Bangladesh [Reference Pickering23], we conducted a sub-analysis exploring associations between pathogen carriage, symptomatic diarrhoea and anthropometric outcomes (height-for-age, weight-for-age and weight-for-height) among children <5 years old to identify potential pathogens of importance for these outcomes. Results from this analysis can contribute to future efforts to understand and mitigate these pathogens – regardless of symptoms – with environmental interventions and highlight the importance of subclinical infections in nutritional outcomes.

Methods

This analysis was nested within a previously described, cluster-randomised controlled trial of a point-of-collection chlorinator on self-reported diarrhoea in children in two urban and peri-urban communities in and around Dhaka, Bangladesh (NCT02606981) [Reference Pickering23]. While this analysis is cross-sectional for the specified outcomes in children in both intervention and control groups, the parent trial included data collection from an open cohort of children <5 years old (enrolled for a baseline (pre-intervention) evaluation between July and November 2015, and followed-up approximately every 2 months over seven post-intervention rounds (rounds 1–7) from November 2015 to December 2016). Briefly, the parent trial was conducted in two low-income neighbourhoods: Tongi, a community outside Dhaka, and Dhaka Uddan, a community within Dhaka city. Compounds of between 1 and 72 (median 5) households within these communities were randomised to intervention and control groups by water point (receiving/not receiving a passive chlorine-dosing device), stratified by site. Water points in each site were ordered by the number of children <5 years old residing in households accessing and using the enrolled water points as their primary drinking-water source, then paired in descending order to either treatment/control status via a random number generator [Reference Pickering23]. The parent study determined the eligibility of water points by the presence of a water storage tank compatible with the dosing device, and compounds had to have ≥1 child <5 years old using that water point as their primary source of drinking water. Follow-up was discontinued if the child aged out of the cohort or had migrated out of the study area and could no longer be located. The study protocol was approved by the scientific and ethical review boards of the International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b, protocol 14022) and the human subjects institutional review board of the Stanford University (protocol 30456) [Reference Pickering23]. CDC coauthors (Berendes) received de-identified data for analysis as per a non-disclosure agreement with the Principal Investigator (Pickering).

Stool collection and analysis

Field staff collected whole stool specimens from all study children during the sixth round of follow-up by instructing caregivers to fill sterile plastic collection containers immediately after child defecation. Field staff delivered collection kits to households and attempted to retrieve the stool samples the following morning. Field staff conducted up to three follow-up visits per household to retrieve specimens. Specimens were kept at −80 °C at the International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b) in Dhaka, Bangladesh and transported on dry ice to the Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, GA, USA) where they were stored at −80 °C until analysis.

We used the Luminex xTAG® Gastrointestinal Pathogen Panel (GPP) to analyse the stool specimens. The GPP is a multiplex end-point RT-PCR assay used to determine the presence or absence of 15 enteric pathogens: Campylobacter; Clostridium difficile, Toxin A/B; E. coli O157; Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) LT/ST; Shiga-like toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) stx1/stx2; Salmonella; Shigella; Vibrio cholerae; Yersinia enterocolitica; adenovirus 40/41; norovirus GI/GII; rotavirus A; Giardia; Cryptosporidium; and Entamoeba histolytica. The GPP has been previously validated against standard clinical assays for the detection of enteric pathogens in multiple countries with >90% sensitivity and ≥99% specificity across pathogens (e.g. [Reference Navidad24]). We performed the GPP protocol per manufacturer's instructions: briefly, we pretreated specimens with 1 mL of ASL stool lysis buffer (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) and co-extracted DNA and RNA using the QIAcube HT platform and the QIAamp 96 Virus QIAcube HT Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). We assayed 11% of samples in duplicate. Per GPP protocol, all samples included an internal inhibition control (MS2). Additionally, each assay run included at least one negative extraction control (ASL buffer only), sample process control (ASL buffer+MS2) and no-template PCR control. We analysed all extracted DNA and RNA within 24 h of extraction. More detail on methods can be also found in previously-described methods of the Maputo Sanitation Trial [Reference Knee10].

Anthropometry metrics

Pairs of trained anthropometrists measured the height and weight of each child during the sixth round of follow-up, concurrent with stool specimen collection, using protocols from the Anthropometric Indicators Measurement Guide by the Food and Nutrition Technical Assistance (FANTA) project [Reference Cogill25]. Anthropometrists measured child height (length) to the nearest 0.1 cm with a Seca Infant/Child ShorrBoard (Weigh and Measure, LLC, Olney, MD, USA) and weight to the nearest 0.1 kg via a Seca 876 Mother/Baby scale (Weigh and Measure, LLC). All heights and weights were measured in triplicate, with the median used for analysis. We calculated height-for-age Z-scores (HAZ scores), weight-for-age Z-scores (WAZ scores) and weight-for-height Z-scores (WHZ scores) and associated undernutrition outcomes (stunting, underweight and wasting, respectively) using standard WHO criteria (below −2 standard deviations (s.d.) for the associated indicator).

Survey data collection

We measured caregiver-reported diarrhoea within the previous 7 days in surveys concurrent to stool collection and anthropometric measurements (round 6) using the locally-defined (‘caregiver-defined’) definition of ‘patla paykana’ and the standard WHO definition of ≥3 loose or watery stools in 24 h, with a visual cue [Reference Pickering23].

At baseline and during each round of follow-up, field staff administered surveys that collected information on household demographics; water, sanitation and hygiene conditions; and household socioeconomic status. Because some questions were not included in each round of follow-up, we paired responses to these survey questions with an enteric pathogen, anthropometry and diarrhoea (all collected in round 6) by nearest prior round. For example, if a question was administered in rounds 3 and 5, we selected the response from round 5 in order to match the results from round 6 most closely in time.

Statistical analysis

We assessed descriptive statistics, including pathogen carriage, diarrhoea, anthropometry and demographic data by age: children <2 years old (within the window where growth trajectories are set [Reference Victora11, Reference Richard26]) vs. children 2 to <5 years old. We used R version 3.4.3 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria [27]), with the lme4 package for (hierarchical) mixed-effects regression modelling [Reference Bates28], for subsequent statistical analyses. We used mixed-effects Poisson regression to estimate prevalence ratios and associated confidence intervals for stunting, wasting and underweight status, as well as caregiver-reported diarrhoea, by the pathogen detected and included random effects for the compound and household of the study child. We used mixed-effects linear regression to estimate the differences in HAZ, WAZ and WHZ by the pathogen detected and included the same random effects. Consistent with the preregistered analysis plan of the parent study, our adjusted analyses included a priori confounders describing sociodemographic differences of the study child and household, as well as the household's placement in the randomised-controlled trial. These factors included treatment group in the parent study, reported water treatment at the household, respondent's highest level of education achieved, age and sex of the child, and household income. For pathogens with significant associations with nutritional outcomes in adjusted models, we then compared the prevalence of pathogen detection between children <2 vs. ≥2 years old. For pathogens with <5% prevalence, we only ran unadjusted models to avoid problems with model convergence. We used an α of 0.05 to determine statistical significance.

Results

Demographics and health of study children

Of 1036 children enrolled in the trial at baseline, 57% were lost to follow-up due to ageing out of the study (20%) or other reasons (37%, e.g. moving out of the study compound); loss to follow-up did not differ by intervention or control group [Reference Pickering23]. The remaining 43% of children, combined with new enrolees in subsequent rounds, yielded 516 children in round 6 from whom the stool specimens were collected, tested for enteric pathogens and linked to other demographic variables, diarrhoea and anthropometry outcomes.

Study households varied in income and education of the respondent (generally the mother), and had between 2 and 13 people (mean 3.5) living in each room (Table 1). Study children varied by age (range 12 days–60 months) and sex (49% female). About 15% had siblings <5 years old. Most households obtained their drinking water from a tap in their compound (97%). Few (17%) reported treating their water despite approximately half of the participants (47%) being enrolled in the intervention arm, which included no-cost chlorine treatment at the point-of-collection. Most of those who reported treating their drinking water reported boiling (83/88). Most households had a pour-flush toilet (98%), although >70% of households shared their toilet with at least one other household and 30% shared with >5 households.

Table 1. Demographics of study children, Bangladesh, 2016 (n = 516)

a Bangladesh Taka.

Few children (6%) had diarrhoea in the week preceding the interview, as reported by their caregiver, but most (88%) had at least one enteric pathogen in the stool specimen collected (Table 2). The most frequently detected pathogens were Giardia spp. (40% prevalence), Salmonella enterica (33%), enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC, 28%), Shigella spp. (27%), Campylobacter spp. (20%) and norovirus (16%). We detected Giardia spp. and Shigella spp. more often in the specimens from older children (≥2 years old) compared with younger children, while we detected S. enterica more often in the stool of younger children. Mean HAZ (−1.32), WAZ (−1.19) and WHZ (−0.64) were all negative, indicating many children were undernourished. About 26% of children were stunted and 24% were underweight, while 7% were wasted. Children ≥2 years old were more likely to be stunted or underweight.

Table 2. Diarrhoea, enteric pathogens and malnutrition in study children in Bangladesh, 2016 (n = 516)

YO, year-olds.

*P < 0.05 for difference of proportions by age group; **P < 0.01 for difference of proportions by age group; ***P < 0.001 for difference of proportions by age group.

Associations between enteric pathogen detection and nutrition outcomes

We compared enteric pathogens detected in the stool specimens with concurrent undernutrition indicators in unadjusted models and models adjusted for the study treatment group, age and sex of the child, household income, any reported water treatment and the respondent's highest education attained (Tables 3 and 4). Although children with Giardia spp. detected in the stool had >50% increased prevalence of stunting and underweight in unadjusted models, these relationships were elevated but not significant in adjusted models (stunting PR 1.39, 95% CI 0.94–2.06; underweight PR 1.23, 95% CI 0.83–1.83; Table 3). Children with adenovirus 40/41 had more than three times higher prevalence of wasting in unadjusted models, but could not be evaluated in adjusted models due to the few (n = 13) detections

Table 3. Bivariable (unadjusted) and multivariable (adjusted) analyses of anthropometric outcome cut-offs by pathogen detection in the stool, Bangladesh, 2016

a Adjusted for treatment group, age (months), sex, income, reported water treatment and respondent's highest education; ‘−’ indicates too few positive observations for stable model convergence. As a rule, organisms with <5% prevalence were not analysed in multivariable (adjusted) associations. Bold indicates significant associations at P < 0.05.

b Enterotoxigenic E. coli.

c Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli.

Table 4. Bivariable (unadjusted) and multivariable (adjusted) analyses of continuous anthropometric outcomes by pathogen detection in the stool, Bangladesh, 2016

a Adjusted for treatment group, age (months), sex, income, reported water treatment and respondent's highest education; ‘-’ indicates too few positive observations for stable model convergence. As a rule, organisms with <5% prevalence were not analysed in multivariable (adjusted) associations. Bold indicates significant associations at P < 0.05.

b Enterotoxigenic E. coli.

c Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli.

When examining HAZ, WAZ and WHZ scores continuously in adjusted models, children with Giardia spp. had −0.22 s.d. lower HAZ (95% CI −0.44 to 0.00) (Table 4). Although children with Giardia spp. detected had lower WAZ while children with Salmonella spp. detected had higher HAZ and WAZ in unadjusted models, these relationships were attenuated in adjusted models.

In a subsequent analysis of Giardia spp. detection by age (children <2 vs. ≥2 years old), Giardia spp. was more likely to be detected in children ≥2 years old (Fig. 1): adjusted PR 3.67, 95% CI 2.43–5.52 (Table S1). In adjusted models, Shigella spp. was also more likely to be detected in children ≥2 years old (PR 2.19, 95% CI 1.44–3.34) while S. enterica (PR 0.42, 95% CI 0.31–0.58) and Campylobacter spp. (PR 0.64, 95% CI 0.43–0.95) were less likely to be detected in ≥2 years old, as compared with <2 years old (Table S1).

Fig. 1. HAZ scores by age and Giardia spp. detection. Mean age and HAZ for children (n = 516) with and without Giardia spp. detection in the stool is denoted by large blue triangles and red circles, respectively, with 95% confidence intervals for the X- and Y-axis means denoted by lines.

Associations between enteric pathogen detection and reported diarrhoea

We compared enteric pathogen detection in the stool to caregiver-defined and WHO-defined diarrhoea in the previous week in both unadjusted and adjusted models using previously-described covariates (Table 5). No pathogens were significantly associated with diarrhoea, using either definition, in adjusted models. In unadjusted models, adenovirus 40/41 detection was significantly associated with caregiver-defined diarrhoea (PR 5.31, 95% CI 1.43–19.6) and rotavirus detection was significantly associated with WHO-defined diarrhoea (PR 6.35, 95% CI 1.44–28.0), though each were detected in very small proportions of children's stool (2.5% and 0.8%, respectively). Prevalence of reported diarrhoea, using either definition, did not vary significantly with the number of pathogens detected in the stool.

Table 5. Prevalence and prevalence ratios (PR) of diarrhoea by pathogen detection in the stool, Bangladesh, 2016

a Adjusted for treatment group, age (months), water treatment, sex, income and respondent's highest education.

b n = 29 reported.

c n = 41 reported.

d Enterotoxigenic E. coli.

e Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli. ‘−’ indicates too few positive observations for stable model convergence. As a rule, organisms with <5% prevalence were not analysed in multivariable (adjusted) associations. Bold indicates significant associations at P < 0.05.

Discussion

This study assessed enteric pathogen carriage and nutritional outcomes in a cross-section of children <5 years old enrolled in an existing trial cohort from urban Dhaka, Bangladesh [Reference Pickering23]. We observed a high prevalence of enteric pathogens detected in the stool (88%) despite the low caregiver-reported prevalence of diarrhoea (6–8%, depending on definition). Although rarely detected, viruses were associated with caregiver-reported and/or WHO-defined diarrhoea, but not other pathogens. Children with Giardia spp. detected in the stool had significantly lower HAZ scores and were somewhat more likely to be stunted (though this difference was not statistically significant); however Giardia spp. detections were more likely in children older than 24 months (outside the period when growth trajectories may be altered [Reference Victora11, Reference Richard26, Reference Humphrey29]).

Our results contribute to the growing body of evidence that exposure to or infection with enteric pathogen – as measured by molecular assays of the stool – may be high despite the low prevalence of reported diarrhoea. Similar results have been found in other low-income, urban settings in children under 5 [Reference Knee10] and multisite studies of urban and rural settings focusing on children in the first 2 years of life [Reference Platts-Mills9]. Taken together, these findings represent a new challenge for implementers of changes to environmental infrastructure and systems, such as WASH, to mitigate enteric pathogen exposures (measured via the stool detection of pathogens, a more sensitive metric) as contrasted with previous studies of diarrhoea or clinical illness. However, enteric pathogen detection may also be more useful as an outcome in randomised-controlled trials given the higher prevalence compared with diarrhoea [Reference Brown and Cumming30, Reference Pickering and Alzua31] and findings that reported diarrhoea may be associated with primarily viral pathogens (generally not effectively mitigated by water and sanitation systems [Reference Knee10, Reference Berendes32]). Thus, the use of caregiver-reported paediatric diarrhoea alone as an outcome measure may be susceptible to biasing trial results towards the null [Reference Berendes32].

Our findings are consistent with other results suggesting Giardia spp. as a highly prevalent, often asymptomatic pathogen associated with growth faltering in children in low-income settings [Reference Prado6, Reference Kotloff8, Reference Kosek12, Reference Rogawski33]. However, our evidence does not suggest that Giardia spp. was a causative agent for child stunting, since Giardia spp. was detected more often in children older than 2 years of age. Instead, our analysis suggests these already undernourished children may instead be more likely to be infected with or unable to clear Giardia spp. infections, possibly due to their malnutrition [Reference Mondal34, Reference Escobedo35], though we cannot characterise the directionality of this association. Disproportionately higher rates of Giardia spp. infections in older children may be explained by a combination of weaning and increased mobility, both of which increase potential exposure rates, since Giardia spp. infection is rarely observed in very young, less-mobile, and often breastfed infants and infection rates increase with age [Reference Rogawski33]. Alternatively, one may hypothesise that children in our study had ‘chronic’ Giardia spp. infections (>6 months in some cases [Reference Hanevik36]) resulting in ongoing shedding due to previous or repeat asymptomatic infections and been unlikely to receive anti-protozoal drugs due to the absence of symptoms.

In contrast to our findings, evidence from other studies still strongly supports Giardia spp. as a key infection that drives reduced growth in young children worldwide, though with mixed evidence on the mechanism of action (e.g. inflammatory pathways, increased gut permeability or other morphological changes characteristic of EED [Reference Crane, Jones and Berkley5]). Longitudinal data from the Etiology, Risk Factors, and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and Consequences for Child Health and Development Project (MAL-ED study) indicated Giardia spp. infection in the first 6 months of life was associated with decreased HAZ at 24 months of age [Reference Rogawski4, Reference Rogawski33]. Mouse models have shown persistent Giardia spp. infection to be associated with increased inflammatory response, changes to gut villi structure and poorer growth [Reference Bartelt37], and there is evidence that adults in high-income settings have experienced changes to gut morphology following a Giardia spp. outbreak [Reference Hanevik36].

There are important limitations to consider in this analysis. Although enteric infections may be persistent in young children, the stool specimens were analysed using molecular detection methods that detected the presence/absence at a single surveillance point; intermittently shed pathogens may be missed in a single stool analysis, which could have been avoided if multiple stool specimens were analysed. Among those specimens with positive detects, we cannot identify whether and when a clinical infection was present (and/or duration), including its intensity, or whether shedding of a pathogen was due to other causes [Reference Levine and Robins-Browne38]. Additionally, although WASH conditions were consistent within the study population and we adjusted for water treatment, income and respondent's education among other potential confounders, other environmental, socioeconomic and nutritional variables that we did not measure could have impacted pathways we assessed. We matched survey data to stool collections as closely as possible in time with outcome ascertainment; however, assumptions about the temporal stability of environmental conditions and sociodemographic characteristics (e.g. consistent conditions across time) were necessary that could have affected the exposure–infection relationships. Cross-sectional analyses have strict temporal constraints and directionality of association cannot be directly assessed.

Enteric infections, as detected via pathogen carriage in the stool, are highly prevalent in low-income children despite the low concurrent prevalence of reported diarrhoea. Giardia spp. is the most common parasitic infection in young children in many low-income settings and is generally not associated with clinical diarrhoea, but is associated with growth faltering. Results from this analysis contribute to the growing literature surrounding associations between Giardia spp. infections and malnutrition and linear growth in these settings [Reference Prado6, Reference Rogawski33, Reference Hanevik36, Reference Bartelt37, Reference Goto39, Reference Goto, Mascie-Taylor and Lunn40], yet may suggest Giardia spp. infections as a symptom, rather than a cause, of undernutrition. Because Giardia and other enteric pathogens detected in the stool are unambiguous markers of past exposure and because they are on the causal pathway to infection, disease and longer-term health outcomes, such targets may offer potential advantages as outcomes in trials of environmental improvement (e.g. WASH) interventions.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268820000369

Acknowledgements

We thank Nazrin Akter, Syed Anjerul Mim, Jenna Swarthout, Frederick Goddard, Shreyan Sen, Yoshika Crider and Raga Ayyagari for assistance with field work and data collection and cleaning. We thank Steve Luby for his comments on an early draft of this manuscript.

Financial support

Financial support for the parent study was provided by the World Bank Strategic Impact Evaluation Fund (SIEF).

Conflict of interest

The authors declare they have no conflicts of interest with regard to this work. The funders played no role in the decision to publish this work. The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

References

1.De Onis, M, Blössner, M and Borghi, E (2012) Prevalence and trends of stunting among pre-school children, 1990–2020. Public Health Nutrition 15, 142148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2.Abarca-Gómez, L et al. (2017) Worldwide trends in body-mass index, underweight, overweight, and obesity from 1975 to 2016: a pooled analysis of 2416 population-based measurement studies in 128·9 million children, adolescents, and adults. The Lancet 390, 26272642.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3.Millward, DJ (2017) Nutrition, infection and stunting: the roles of deficiencies of individual nutrients and foods, and of inflammation, as determinants of reduced linear growth of children. Nutrition Research Reviews 30, 5072.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4.Rogawski, ET et al. (2018) Use of quantitative molecular diagnostic methods to investigate the effect of enteropathogen infections on linear growth in children in low-resource settings: longitudinal analysis of results from the MAL-ED cohort study. The Lancet Global Health 6, e1319e1328.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5.Crane, RJ, Jones, KDJ and Berkley, JA (2015) Environmental enteric dysfunction: an overview. Food and Nutrition Bulletin 36(suppl. 1), S76S87. Available at http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=4472379&tool=pmcentrez&rendertype=abstract.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
6.Prado, MS et al. (2005) Asymptomatic giardiasis and growth in young children; a longitudinal study in Salvador, Brazil. Parasitology 131, 5156.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7.WHO (2013) WHO: diarrhoeal disease [Internet]. WHO fact sheets. p. #330. Available at http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs330/en/.Google Scholar
8.Kotloff, KL et al. (2013) Burden and aetiology of diarrhoeal disease in infants and young children in developing countries (the Global Enteric Multicenter Study, GEMS): a prospective, case-control study. The Lancet 382, 209222. Available at http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0140673613608442.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9.Platts-Mills, JA et al. (2015) Pathogen-specific burdens of community diarrhoea in developing countries: a multisite birth cohort study (MAL-ED). The Lancet Global Health 3, 564575. Available at http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2214109X15001515.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10.Knee, J et al. (2018) Risk factors for childhood enteric infection in urban Maputo, Mozambique: a cross-sectional study. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 12, e0006956. Available at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006956.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
11.Victora, CG et al. (2010) Worldwide timing of growth faltering: revisiting implications for interventions. Pediatrics 125, e473e480.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
12.Kosek, MN et al. (2017) Causal pathways from enteropathogens to environmental enteropathy: findings from the MAL-ED Birth Cohort Study. EBioMedicine 18, 109117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13.Wolf, J et al. (2018) The impact of drinking water, sanitation and hand washing with soap on childhood diarrhoeal disease: updated meta-analysis and -regression. Tropical medicine and international health. TBC(TBC-early view).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14.Brown, J et al. (2015) A controlled, before-and-after trial of an urban sanitation intervention to reduce enteric infections in children: research protocol for the Maputo Sanitation (MapSan) study, Mozambique. BMJ Open 5, e008215. Available at http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/5/6/e008215.short.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
15.Pickering, AJ et al. (2015) Effect of a community-led sanitation intervention on child diarrhoea and child growth in rural Mali: a cluster-randomised controlled trial. The Lancet Global Health 3, e701e711.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
16.Reese, H et al. (2019) Assessing longer-term effectiveness of a combined household-level piped water and sanitation intervention on child diarrhoea, acute respiratory infection, soil-transmitted helminth infection and nutritional status: a matched cohort study in rural Odisha. International Journal of Epidemiology 48, 17571767.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
17.Luby, SP et al. (2018) Effects of water quality, sanitation, handwashing, and nutritional interventions on diarrhoea and child growth in rural Bangladesh: a cluster randomised controlled trial. The Lancet Global Health 6, e302e315. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(17)30490-4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
18.Null, C et al. (2018) Effects of water quality, sanitation, handwashing, and nutritional interventions on diarrhoea and child growth in rural Kenya: a cluster-randomised controlled trial. The Lancet Global Health 6, e316e329. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30005-6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
19.Humphrey, JH et al. (2019) Independent and combined effects of improved water, sanitation, and hygiene, and improved complementary feeding, on child stunting and anaemia in rural Zimbabwe: a cluster-randomised trial. The Lancet Global Health 7, e132e147. Available at https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2214109X18303747.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20.Harper, KM et al. (2018) Environmental enteric dysfunction pathways and child stunting: a systematic review. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 12, 123. Available at http://journals.plos.org/plosntds/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pntd.0006205&type=printable.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
21.Luby, SP (2017) Clean water, clean hands or new vaccines? Journal of Infection 74, S18S22. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0163-4453(17)30186-X.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
22.Cumming, O and Cairncross, S (2016) Can water, sanitation and hygiene help eliminate stunting? Current evidence and policy implications. Maternal & Child Nutrition 12, 91105. Available at http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/mcn.12258.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
23.Pickering, AJ et al. (2019) Effect of passive drinking water chlorination at the point-of-collection on child diarrhea: a double-blind, cluster-randomised controlled trial in urban Bangladesh. Lancet Global Health 7, e1247e1256. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(19)30315-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
24.Navidad, JF et al. (2013) Evaluation of luminex xTAG gastrointestinal pathogen analyte-specific reagents for high-throughput, simultaneous detection of bacteria, viruses, and parasites of clinical and public health importance. Journal of Clinical Microbiology 51, 30183024.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
25.Cogill, B (2003) Anthropometric indicators measurement guide, 2003 revised edition. Available at http://www.fantaproject.org.Google Scholar
26.Richard, SA et al. (2014) Catch-up growth occurs after diarrhea in early childhood. The Journal of Nutrition 144, 965971. Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24699805.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
27.R Core Team (2015) R: A language and environment for statistical computing. Vienna, Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. Available at https://www.r-project.org/.Google Scholar
28.Bates, D et al. (2014) Fitting linear mixed-effects models using lme4. Journal of Statistical Software 67, 148. Available at http://arxiv.org/abs/1406.5823.Google Scholar
29.Humphrey, JH (2009) Child undernutrition, tropical enteropathy, toilets, and handwashing. The Lancet 374, 10321035. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(09)60950-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
30.Brown, J and Cumming, O (2019) Stool-based pathogen detection offers advantages as an outcome measure for water, sanitation, and hygiene trials. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 0, 12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
31.Pickering, AJ and Alzua, ML (2016) Are studies underestimating the effects of sanitation on child nutrition? Authors’ reply. The Lancet Global Health 4, e160.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
32.Berendes, D et al. (2017) Household sanitation is associated with lower risk of bacterial and protozoal enteric infections, but not viral infections and diarrhea, in a cohort study in a low-income urban neighborhood in Vellore, India. Tropical Medicine & International Health 00, 111. Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28653489%5Cn; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28653489.Google Scholar
33.Rogawski, ET et al. (2017) Determinants and impact of giardia infection in the first 2 years of life in the MAL-ED birth cohort. Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society 6, 153160. doi: https://academic.oup.com/jpids/article/2997417/Determinants.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
34.Mondal, D et al. (2012) Contribution of enteric infection, altered intestinal barrier function, and maternal malnutrition to infant malnutrition in Bangladesh. Clinical Infectious Diseases 54, 185192.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
35.Escobedo, AA et al. (2014) Management of chronic Giardia infection. Expert Review of Anti-Infective Therapy 12, 11431157.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
36.Hanevik, K et al. (2007) Persisting symptoms and duodenal inflammation related to Giardia duodenalis infection. Journal of Infection 55, 524530.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
37.Bartelt, LA et al. (2013) Persistent G. lamblia impairs growth in a murine malnutrition model. Journal of Clinical Investigation 123, 26722684.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
38.Levine, MM and Robins-Browne, RM (2012) Factors that explain excretion of enteric pathogens by persons without diarrhea. Clinical Infectious Diseases 55(suppl. 1), 303311.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
39.Goto, R et al. (2002) Poor intestinal permeability in mildly stunted Nepali children: associations with weaning practices and Giardia lamblia infection. The British Journal of Nutrition 88, 141149.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
40.Goto, R, Mascie-Taylor, CGN and Lunn, PG (2009) Impact of intestinal permeability, inflammation status and parasitic infections on infant growth faltering in rural Bangladesh. British Journal of Nutrition 101, 15091516.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Demographics of study children, Bangladesh, 2016 (n = 516)

Figure 1

Table 2. Diarrhoea, enteric pathogens and malnutrition in study children in Bangladesh, 2016 (n = 516)

Figure 2

Table 3. Bivariable (unadjusted) and multivariable (adjusted) analyses of anthropometric outcome cut-offs by pathogen detection in the stool, Bangladesh, 2016

Figure 3

Table 4. Bivariable (unadjusted) and multivariable (adjusted) analyses of continuous anthropometric outcomes by pathogen detection in the stool, Bangladesh, 2016

Figure 4

Fig. 1. HAZ scores by age and Giardia spp. detection. Mean age and HAZ for children (n = 516) with and without Giardia spp. detection in the stool is denoted by large blue triangles and red circles, respectively, with 95% confidence intervals for the X- and Y-axis means denoted by lines.

Figure 5

Table 5. Prevalence and prevalence ratios (PR) of diarrhoea by pathogen detection in the stool, Bangladesh, 2016

Supplementary material: File

Berendes et al. Supplementary Materials

Berendes et al. Supplementary Materials

Download Berendes et al. Supplementary Materials(File)
File 20.2 KB