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Meningitis in infancy in England and Wales: follow up at age 5 years
Authors:Bedford H  de Louvois J  Halket S  Peckham C  Hurley R  Harvey D
Institution:Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 1EH. h.bedford@ich.ucl.ac.uk
Abstract:ObjectiveTo describe important sequelae occurring among a cohort of children aged 5 years who had had meningitis during the first year of life and who had been identified by a prospective national study of meningitis in infancy in England and Wales between 1985 and 1987.DesignFollow up questionnaires asking about the children''s health and development were sent to general practitioners and parents of the children and to parents of matched controls. The organism that caused the infection and age at infection were also recorded.SettingEngland and Wales.ParticipantsGeneral practitioners and parents of children who had had meningitis before the age of 1 year and of matched controls.ResultsAltogether, 1584 of 1717 (92.2%) children who had had meningitis and 1391 of 1485 (93.6%) controls were successfully followed up. Among children who survived to age 5 years 247 of 1584 (15.6%) had a disability; there was a 10-fold increase in the risk of severe or moderate disability at 5 years of age among children who had had meningitis (relative risk 10.3, 95% confidence interval 6.7 to 16.0, P<0.001). There was considerable variation in the rates of severe or moderate disability in children infected with different organisms.ConclusionThe long term consequences of having meningitis during the first year of life are significant: 32 of 1717 (1.8%) children died within five years. Not only did almost a fifth of children with meningitis have a permanent, severe or moderately severe disability, but subtle deficits were also more prevalent.

What is already known on this topic

Meningitis in infancy is associated with important long term consequencesThere is considerable variation in outcome depending on which organism caused the infection

What this study adds

This follow up study of 1717 children who had meningitis in infancy found that they had a 10-fold increase in risk of severe or moderate disabilities at age 5 years compared with children in the control groupThe outcome of having meningitis was associated with the age at infection, and children who had meningitis in the neonatal period were more likely to have health and development problems than those older than 1 monthSubtle deficits, such as middle ear disease and visual and behavioural problems, were more prevalent among children who had had meningitis in infancy
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