Background. There are no published data for the incidence or etiology of ch
ildhood bacteremia in Malawi. We describe the clinical and microbiologic fe
atures of children admitted to hospital from whom blood cultures yielded ba
cterial pathogens.
Methods. Any neonate or child admitted to the pediatric wards of the Queen
Elizabeth Central Hospital had a blood culture taken in the event of fever
without obvious clinical explanation. Clinical and microbiologic data were
prospectively collected for children with a significant positive culture.
Results. Between September, 1996, and August, 1997, we processed 2123 cultu
res. Of these, 365 (17.2%) grew a pathogen. Non-typhi salmonellae (NTS) and
enteric Gram-negative bacilli constituted 67.4% of isolates, and Streptoco
ccus pneumoniae constituted 16.4%. More than two-thirds of NTS episodes coi
ncided with the peak malaria transmission season (January to June); 67% of
bacteremic children were malnourished, 28% severely so. Patients with NTS b
acteremia were significantly more likely to have coincident malaria and to
have splenomegaly and anemia than children with other infecting organisms.
The overall mortality was 38% but varied considerably according to age and
nutritional status. Prior antibiotic use, coincident malaria or meningitis
did not adversely affect outcome. In vitro resistance to the commonly avail
able antibiotics ampicillin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was found in
76 and 71% of NTS isolates. Screening tests for penicillin resistance sugge
sted a rate of 21% among pneumococci.
Conclusions. Bacteremia is common in hospitalized Malawian children and has
a high mortality. There are high rates of resistance to some of the common
ly used antibacterial agents.