Background. Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) are a leading cause of pediatric morbidity and mortality worldwide, with ~650,000 deaths recorded in < 5-yearolds in 2016. Cross-sectional studies on hospitalized LRTIs are available, but longitudinal studies on the total burden of viral LRTIs are scarce. This study (NCT01995175) prospectively collected incident RSV and other viral LRTIs in a multinational cohort. Methods. From 2013 to 2017, infants in 8 countries were enrolled at birth and followed for LRTIs up to 2 years of age. Infants with suspected LRTIs were clinically examined and swabbed. Nasal swab samples were tested using quantitative real-time PCR for RSV and multiplex PCR panel for 16 other respiratory viruses/subtypes; bacterial culture was not performed. LRTI and severe LRTI episodes were defined per 2015 WHO LRTI case definitions. Viruses detected from nasal swabs collected from participants with WHO-defined LRTI and severe LRTI episodes are reported. Results. The 2401 infants followed experienced 1012 LRTI episodes; 259 of these were severe LRTIs. At least 1 virus was detected from 909 (90%) and 235 (91%) LRTI and severe LRTI episodes, respectively. Enteroviruses/Rhinoviruses (EV/RV, 49%) were detected most frequently in samples collected from LRTI episodes, followed by RSV (22%), parainfluenza (PIV, 14%), human metapneumovirus (hMPV, 8%) and seasonal coronavirus (CoV, 6%). RSV was detected in 39% of samples from LRTI episodes in < 3-month-olds and in 18% of 1-year-olds (Table 1). In a similar trend, RSV was detected in 47% of samples from severe LRTI episodes in < 3-month-olds and in 21% of 1-year-olds (Table 2). Co-infection with another virus was common in CoV-positive samples (67%), while most samples positive for RSV (71%), hMPV (70%), EV/RV (67%) and PIV (58%) had no other virus detected. Table 1. Occurrence of laboratory confirmed respiratory viral infections by viral pathogens identified in nasal swab samples from WHO-defined LRTI episodes Table 2. Occurrence of laboratory confirmed respiratory viral infections by viral pathogens identified in nasal swab samples from WHO-defined severe LRTI episodes Conclusion(s): Respiratory viruses are detected in the majority of LRTIs during the first 2 years of life. RSV likely accounts for much of this overall LRTI burden. Our results suggest that RSV most strongly impacted the very young; it was the most commonly detected virus in severe LRTIs in infants aged < 3 months. RSV was also persistently detected at high levels in samples from LRTIs (22%) and severe LRTIs (28%) in children up to 2 years old.
CITATION STYLE
Madhi, S. A., Ceballos, A., Colas, J. A., Cousin, L., D’Andrea, U., Dieussaert, I., … Stoszek, S. K. (2020). 1506. Burden of Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) and Other Lower Respiratory Tract Viral Infections During the First Two Years of Life: a Prospective Study. Open Forum Infectious Diseases, 7(Supplement_1), S756–S756. https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.1687
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