Anthropometric and neurocognitive consequences of Campylobacter , enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli , and norovirus: A systematic review
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Objectives
Synthesizing the evidence of the longer-term consequences of enteric pathogens, such as stunted growth and suboptimal neurodevelopment, is a key step to articulating the value of, and generating demand for, vaccines.
Methods
We conducted a systematic review of published literature documenting associations of three leading causes of diarrhea (enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli [ETEC], norovirus, and Campylobacter species [sp.]) with prospective anthropometric and neurocognitive outcomes in children under five years (PROSPERO CRD42024600676 ).
Results
Thirty publications were included, including several reporting on data from the same underlying cohort; 16 publications included outcomes associated with Campylobacter , 12 ETEC, and 7 norovirus. There was large variation in how studies reported outcomes, exposure groups, and timeframes of association. There was modest evidence of linear growth detriments associated with all three pathogens, modest evidence of Campylobacter limiting weight gain, and no evidence of detrimental impacts of these pathogens on wasting or neurodevelopment, albeit these two outcomes were rarely reported.
Conclusion
Differences in outcome definitions, comparison groups, and timeframes prohibited meta-analysis and emphasize the need for more standardization of reporting anthropometric and neurocognitive outcomes following enteric pathogen infection. Randomized controlled trials of efficacious pathogen-specific interventions may help to address challenges with confounding and reverse causality in observational studies.