Ileal Perforation and Enteric Fever: Implications for Burden of Disease Estimation

Njarekkattuvalappil, Swathi Krishna ; Thomas, Maria ; Kapil, Arti ; Saigal, Karnika ; Ray, Pallab ; Anandan, Shalini ; Nagaraj, Savitha ; Shastri, Jayanthi ; Perumal, Sulochana Putli bai ; Jinka, Dasaratha Ramaiah ; Thankaraj, Shajin ; Ismavel, Vijayanand ; Zachariah, Pradeep ; Singh, Ashita ; Gupta, Madhu ; Ebenezer, Sheena Evelyn ; Thomas, Mathew Santosh ; Ghosh, Dhruva ; Kataria, Kamal ; Senger, Mamta ; Balasubramanian, Sundaram ; Kang, Gagandeep ; John, Jacob (2021) Ileal Perforation and Enteric Fever: Implications for Burden of Disease Estimation The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 224 (Supple). S522-S528. ISSN 0022-1899

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiab258

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiab258

Abstract

Background Ileal perforation occurs in about 1% of enteric fevers as a complication, with a case fatality risk (CFR) of 20%–30% in the early 1990s that decreased to 15.4% in 2011 in South East Asia. We report nontraumatic ileal perforations and its associated CFR from a 2-year prospective enteric fever surveillance across India. Methods The Surveillance for Enteric Fever in India (SEFI) project established a multitiered surveillance system for enteric fever between December 2017 and March 2020. Nontraumatic ileal perforations were surveilled at 8 tertiary care and 6 secondary care hospitals and classified according to etiology. Results Of the 158 nontraumatic ileal perforation cases identified,126 were consented and enrolled. Enteric fever (34.7%), tuberculosis (19.0%), malignancy (5.8%), and perforation of Meckel diverticulum (4.9%) were the common etiology. In those with enteric fever ileal perforation, the CFR was 7.1%. Conclusions Enteric fever remains the most common cause of nontraumatic ileal perforation in India, followed by tuberculosis. Better modalities of establishing etiology are required to classify the illness, and frame management guidelines and preventive measures. CFR data are critical for comprehensive disease burden estimation and policymaking.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to University of Chicago Press.
Keywords:Burden estimates; Case fatality rate; Enteric fever; Meckel diverticulum; Nontraumatic ileal perforation; Surveillance; Tuberculosis.
ID Code:141904
Deposited On:29 Dec 2025 10:25
Last Modified:29 Dec 2025 10:25

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