Meningococcal disease: haemorrhagic diathesis, focal neurologic
signs and increasing age increased the risk of death or
disability
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Clinical bottom line (level 1b)
- One in sixteen people with meningococcal disease died
within 7 days.
- The risk was increased with the following factors
- bleeding diathesis
- focal neurologic signs
- aged 60 or more
and reduced with pre-admission
antibiotics.
- One in twenty-seven patients developed permanent or
disabling sequelae.
- The risk was increased with the following factors
- haemorrhagic diathesis
- focal neurologic signs
- increasing age
and reduced with pre-admission
antibiotics. | |
Barquet et al: Archives of Internal Medicine 1999; 159 :
2329-2340
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Expires October 2004 |
The study Prospective cohort study with objective outcomes, adjusted
for confounding factors, not validated in an independent set of patients.
Setting: 24 acute hospitals, Barcelona, Spain
643 patients
(aged 28 days to 89 years mean 14 years: 70% were aged < 15 years, 54%
female) with meningococcal disease - confirmed if N. meningitidis isolated
from blood culture, CSF or both; or an illness with fever and petechiae
diagnosed by a local physician
Factors studied:
- antibiotics, time to first dose of antibiotics, shock, coma,
haemorrhagic diathesis, focal neurologic signs, serological type
- pre-admission antibiotic
- aged 60 or more
- focal neurologic signs
- haemorrhagic diathesis spontaneous clinically apparent bleeding
- pre-admission antibiotic
- aged 15 to 59
- aged 60 or more
- focal neurologic signs
- haemorrhagic diathesis
Logistic regression was used to
adjust for confounding factors.
followed for discharge from
hospital Outcomes studied:
- death
- permanent or disabling sequelae
The evidence
| outcome |
time to outcome |
number of patients/total number |
% (95% CI) |
NNF (95% CI) |
| death |
7 days |
41/643 |
6.4% (4.5% to 8.3%) |
16 (12 to 22) |
| permanent or disabling sequelae |
- days |
24/643 |
3.7% (2.3% to 5.2%) |
27 (19 to 44) |
prognostic factor for death |
time to outcome |
control rate (%) |
adjusted OR (95% CI) |
NNF+ (95% CI) |
| pre-admission antibiotic |
7 days |
38/361 (10.5%) |
0.07 (0.02 to 0.34) |
-10 (-15 to -10) |
| aged 60 or more |
7 days |
28/595 (4.7%) |
6.32 (2.35 to 16.99) |
5 (2 to 18) |
| focal neurologic signs |
7 days |
31/616 (5.0%) |
9.86 (3.26 to 29.83) |
3 (2 to 10) |
| haemorrhagic diathesis |
7 days |
25/617 (4.1%) |
63.38 (20.7 to 194.1) |
1 (1 to 2) |
prognostic factor for permanent or disabling
sequelae |
time to outcome |
control rate (%) |
adjusted OR (95% CI) |
NNF+ (95% CI) |
| pre-admission antibiotic |
- days |
21/323 (6.5%) |
0.16 (0.04 to 0.58) |
-19 (-38 to -16) |
| aged 15 to 59 |
- days |
7/430 (1.6%) |
4.79 (1.65 to 13.89) |
17 (6 to 97) |
| aged 60 or more |
- days |
7/430 (1.6%) |
6.71 (1.71 to 26.3) |
12 (3 to 89) |
| focal neurologic signs |
- days |
16/585 (2.7%) |
15.52 (4.51 to 53.4) |
4 (2 to 12) |
| haemorrhagic diathesis |
- days |
21/592 (3.5%) |
20.57 (3.24 to 130.8) |
3 (1 to 14) |
Comments
- 4.8% of cases were secondary (95% CI: 3.2% to 6.5%)
- Serogroup B cases: 56% (95% CI: 52% to 60%). Serogroup C cases: 19%
(95% CI: 16% to 22%)
- Mortality
- meningococcaemia: 11.2%
- meningococcaemia with meningitis: 4.7%
- meningitis: 4.2%
Citation
- Barquet N, Domingo P, Cayla JA, et al: meningococcal disease in a
large urban population (Barcelona, 1987-1992); predictors of dismal
prognosis. Archives of Internal Medicine 1999; 159 : 2329-2340
Search Terms: ? Contributor: Chris Ball, October 2001
Reviewer:
Clinical Question.
| Patient |
meningococcal disease |
| Intervention or Exposure |
focal neurology, bleeding, age, pre-admission
antibiotic |
| Outcome |
death, disability | |
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