European Journal of Pediatrics | 2021

Epidemiology of respiratory syncytial virus in a community birth cohort of infants in the first 2 years of life

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common virus identified in children hospitalised with acute respiratory infections. However, less is known about RSV in community settings. This report describes RSV epidemiology in the community, including acute illness episodes, healthcare burden, and risk factors in Australian children during the first 2-years of life. A community-based, birth cohort from Brisbane, Australia, followed children until their second birthday. Parents completed daily respiratory symptom and illness-burden diaries. Weekly parent-collected nasal swabs were analysed for RSV by real-time polymerase chain reaction assays. Serum RSV-neutralising antibodies were assayed at age 3 years. Overall, 158 children provided 11,216 swabs, of which 104 were RSV-positive (85 incident episodes). RSV incidence in the first 2 years of life was 0.46 (95% CI = 0.37–0.58) episodes per child-year. Incidence increased with age and formal childcare attendance and was highest in autumn. Of 82 episodes linked with symptom data, 60 (73.2%) were symptomatic, 28 (34.1%) received community-based medical care, and 2 (2.4%) led to hospitalisation. Viral load was higher in symptomatic than asymptomatic infections. In 72 children, RSV-specific antibody seroprevalence was 94.4% at age 3 years. Conclusion: RSV incidence increased after age 6-months with approximately three-quarters of infections symptomatic and most infections treated in the community. What is known •RSV is a major cause of hospitalisation for acute lower respiratory infections in infants and young children, especially in the first 6 months of life. •However, limited data exist on the overall burden in young children at the community level. What is new •RSV incidence in the community increases after age 6 months, and by 3 years, most children have been infected. •About one-quarter of RSV infections were asymptomatic in children aged < 2 years, and approximately 60% of children with RSV-related symptoms had a healthcare contact of any kind with most managed within the community. What is known •RSV is a major cause of hospitalisation for acute lower respiratory infections in infants and young children, especially in the first 6 months of life. •However, limited data exist on the overall burden in young children at the community level. What is new •RSV incidence in the community increases after age 6 months, and by 3 years, most children have been infected. •About one-quarter of RSV infections were asymptomatic in children aged < 2 years, and approximately 60% of children with RSV-related symptoms had a healthcare contact of any kind with most managed within the community.

Volume 180
Pages 2125 - 2135
DOI 10.1007/s00431-021-03998-0
Language English
Journal European Journal of Pediatrics

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