Validity of a Minimally Invasive Autopsy for Cause of Death Determination in Adults in Mozambique: An Observational Study
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PLOS Medicine
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Background
There is an urgent need to identify tools able to provide reliable information on the cause of
death in low-income regions, since current methods (verbal autopsy, clinical records, and
complete autopsies) are either inaccurate, not feasible, or poorly accepted. We aimed to
compare the performance of a standardized minimally invasive autopsy (MIA) approach
with that of the gold standard, the complete diagnostic autopsy (CDA), in a series of adults
who died at Maputo Central Hospital in Mozambique.
Methods and Findings
In this observational study, coupled MIAs and CDAs were performed in 112 deceased
patients. The MIA analyses were done blindly, without knowledge of the clinical data or the
results of the CDA. We compared the MIA diagnosis with the CDA diagnosis of cause of
death.
CDA diagnoses comprised infectious diseases (80; 71.4%), malignant tumors (16;
14.3%), and other diseases, including non-infectious cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, kidney,
and lung diseases (16; 14.3%). A MIA diagnosis was obtained in 100/112 (89.2%)
cases. The overall concordance between the MIA diagnosis and CDA diagnosis was
75.9% (85/112). The concordance was higher for infectious diseases and malignant tumors
(63/80 [78.8%] and 13/16 [81.3%], respectively) than for other diseases (9/16; 56.2%). The specific microorganisms causing death were identified in the MIA in 62/74 (83.8%) of the
infectious disease deaths with a recognized cause.
The main limitation of the analysis is that both the MIA and the CDA include some
degree of expert subjective interpretation. Conclusions
A simple MIA procedure can identify the cause of death in many adult deaths in Mozambique.
This tool could have a major role in improving the understanding and surveillance of
causes of death in areas where infectious diseases are a common cause of mortality.