A Systematic Review of Mortality from Untreated Scrub Typhus (Orientia tsutsugamushi)

Background Scrub typhus, a bacterial infection caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi, is increasingly recognized as an important cause of fever in Asia, with an estimated one million infections occurring each year. Limited access to health care and the disease’s non-specific symptoms mean that many patients are undiagnosed and untreated, but the mortality from untreated scrub typhus is unknown. This review systematically summarizes the literature on the untreated mortality from scrub typhus and disease outcomes. Methodology/Principal Findings A literature search was performed to identify patient series containing untreated patients. Patients were included if they were symptomatic and had a clinical or laboratory diagnosis of scrub typhus and excluded if they were treated with antibiotics. The primary outcome was mortality from untreated scrub typhus and secondary outcomes were total days of fever, clinical symptoms, and laboratory results. A total of 76 studies containing 89 patient series and 19,644 patients were included in the final analysis. The median mortality of all patient series was 6.0% with a wide range (min-max) of 0–70%. Many studies used clinical diagnosis alone and had incomplete data on secondary outcomes. Mortality varied by location and increased with age and in patients with myocarditis, delirium, pneumonitis, or signs of hemorrhage, but not according to sex or the presence of an eschar or meningitis. Duration of fever was shown to be long (median 14.4 days Range (9–19)). Conclusions Results show that the untreated mortality from scrub typhus appears lower than previously reported estimates. More data are required to clarify mortality according to location and host factors, clinical syndromes including myocarditis and central nervous system disease, and in vulnerable mother-child populations. Increased surveillance and improved access to diagnostic tests are required to accurately estimate the untreated mortality of scrub typhus. This information would facilitate reliable quantification of DALYs and guide empirical treatment strategies.

[1]  P. Newton,et al.  Orientia, rickettsia, and leptospira pathogens as causes of CNS infections in Laos: a prospective study , 2015, The Lancet. Global health.

[2]  F. Nosten,et al.  Pregnancy Outcome in Relation to Treatment of Murine Typhus and Scrub Typhus Infection: A Fever Cohort and a Case Series Analysis , 2014, PLoS neglected tropical diseases.

[3]  N. Day,et al.  Unresolved problems related to scrub typhus: a seriously neglected life-threatening disease. , 2013, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[4]  X. de Lamballerie,et al.  Causes of non-malarial fever in Laos: a prospective study , 2013, The Lancet. Global health.

[5]  Xianjun Wang,et al.  Scrub typhus: surveillance, clinical profile and diagnostic issues in Shandong, China. , 2012, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[6]  P. Fuerst,et al.  Endemic Scrub Typhus–like Illness, Chile , 2011, Emerging infectious diseases.

[7]  N. Day,et al.  Isolation of a Novel Orientia Species (O. chuto sp. nov.) from a Patient Infected in Dubai , 2010, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.

[8]  P. Fuerst,et al.  Scrub typhus: the geographic distribution of phenotypic and genotypic variants of Orientia tsutsugamushi. , 2009, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[9]  N. Day,et al.  Association of High Orientia tsutsugamushi DNA Loads with Disease of Greater Severity in Adults with Scrub Typhus , 2008, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.

[10]  N. Day,et al.  Scrub typhus serologic testing with the indirect immunofluorescence method as a diagnostic gold standard: a lack of consensus leads to a lot of confusion. , 2007, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[11]  S. Green,et al.  Immunopathological mechanisms in dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever , 2006, Current opinion in infectious diseases.

[12]  P. Newton,et al.  Rickettsial Infections and Fever, Vientiane, Laos , 2006, Emerging infectious diseases.

[13]  K. Shimada,et al.  A case of tsutsugamushi disease probably contracted in Africa , 1991, European Journal of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.

[14]  S. Mahajan,et al.  Scrub typhus. , 2005, The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India.

[15]  P. Parola,et al.  Scrub typhus and tropical rickettsioses , 2003, Current opinion in infectious diseases.

[16]  D. Raoult,et al.  Outbreak of Scrub Typhus in Southern India during the Cooler Months , 2003, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[17]  D. H. Walker,et al.  A case of scrub typhus probably acquired in Africa. , 1997, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[18]  R. Rosenberg Drug-resistant scrub typhus: Paradigm and paradox. , 1997, Parasitology today.

[19]  D. Paslier,et al.  The Trypanosoma cruzi genome initiative. , 1997, Parasitology today.

[20]  D. Strickman,et al.  Scrub typhus infections poorly responsive to antibiotics in northern Thailand , 1996, The Lancet.

[21]  Y. Hara,et al.  The influence of chemotherapy on the mortality rates of tsutsugamushi disease in Northern Japan, and some other statistical information. , 1956, American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[22]  M. Sasa Comparative Epidemiology of Tsutsugamushi Disease in Japan (Studies on Tsutsugamushi, Part 76). , 1954 .

[23]  W. Card,et al.  Scrub-typhus vaccine; field trial in South-east Asia. , 1947, Lancet.

[24]  T. Mackie Observations on tsutsugamushi disease (scrub typhus) in Assam and Burma. , 1946, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[25]  J. Forrester,et al.  SCRUB TYPHUS IN ASSAM AND BURMA: A CLINICAL STUDY OF 616 CASES , 1946, Medicine.

[26]  E. N. Irons Clinical and laboratory variation of virulence in scrub typhus. , 1946, American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[27]  R. Andrew A NOTE ON THE INCUBATION PERIOD OF SCRUB TYPHUS AND ITS CORRELATION WITH CLINICAL SEVERITY , 1945 .

[28]  C. B. Sangster,et al.  SCRUB TYPHUS: CLINICAL ASPECTS , 1945 .

[29]  A. Sinclair,et al.  MITE‐BORNE (SCRUB) TYPHUS IN PAPUA AND THE MANDATED TERRITORY OF NEW GUINEA: REPORT OF 626 CASES , 1944 .

[30]  K. Morishita Tsutsugamushi Disease: its Epidemiology in Formosa. , 1942 .

[31]  C. Subrahmanyam Tropical typhus in Singapore , 1936 .

[32]  M. O'connor Typhus Fever with Special Reference to its Occurrence in Malaya. , 1935 .

[33]  川村 麟也 Studies on tsutsugamushi disease (Japanese flood fever) , 1926 .