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The Global Pediatric Diarrhea Surveillance network: Rationale and methods

Soeters, H. M.; Antoni, S.; Iyer, S. S.; Weldegebriel, G.; Biey, J.; Mwenda, J. M.; Rey-Benito, G.; Ortiz, C.; Pastore, R.; Videbaek, D.; Singh, S.; Njambe, E.; Sangal, L.; Dhongde, D.; Grabovac, V.; Logronio, J.; Fahmy, K.; Ghoniem, A.; Armah, G.; Dennis, F. E.; Seheri, M. L.; Magagula, N.; Rakau-Nondela, K.; Fumian, T. M.; Maciel, I. T. A.; Samoilovich, E.; Semeiko, G.; Varghese, T.; Thomas, S.; Bines, J.; Li, D.; Kabir, F.; Liu, J.; Houpt, E. R.; Gautam, R.; Mirza, S. A.; Vinje, J.; Mulders, M. N.; Tate, J. E.; Parashar, U. D.; Platts-Mills, J. A.; Global Pediatric Diarrhea Surveillance net

2026-05-27 public and global health
10.64898/2026.05.21.26352576 medRxiv
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Background Diarrhea remains a leading cause of child morbidity and mortality worldwide. Improved and ongoing estimates of the etiologies of severe diarrhea, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), are crucial to inform the use of current vaccines and other interventions and to help prioritize the development of new vaccines. Producing rigorous longitudinal data on the global burden and etiology of pediatric diarrhea requires a geographically broad surveillance network with standardized epidemiologic, laboratory, and analytic protocols. Methods We describe the rationale and methods of the Global Pediatric Diarrhea Surveillance (GPDS) network, a World Health Organization (WHO)-coordinated public health surveillance network investigating the etiology of hospitalized diarrhea among children aged <5 years in LMICs. The GPDS network enrolls children hospitalized with diarrhea at 38 sentinel surveillance sites in 31 LMICs across all 6 WHO Regions. Randomly selected stool specimens were tested by TaqMan Array Card quantitative polymerase chain reaction for 16 enteric pathogens previously associated with pediatric diarrhea. GPDS produces estimates of pathogen-specific attributable fractions and incidence of diarrheal hospitalizations at the global, regional, and country levels. Conclusions As a WHO-coordinated global surveillance network, GPDS evaluates pathogens associated with hospitalized pediatric diarrhea. The network monitors the changing burden of pathogens over time, monitors circulating strains, and generates data to inform decision-making around public health interventions. GPDS also improves global, regional, and country diarrheal disease burden estimates, informs new enteric vaccine development, and potentially provides a platform for future enteric vaccine evaluation.

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