The interdependence between rhinovirus cycle threshold values, viral co-detections, and clinical disease severity in children with and without comorbidities
María Isabel Sánchez Códez, Isabel Benavente Fernández, Katherine Moyer, Amy L. Leber, Octavio Ramilo, Asuncion Mejias
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Rhinoviruses (RVs) are a leading cause of acute respiratory infections (ARI) in children. The relationship between RV viral loads (VL), RV/viral-co-detections and disease severity, is incompletely understood. We studied children and adolescents ≤21 years with RV-ARI that were identified as inpatients or outpatients using a PCR panel from 2011-2013. RV VL were stratified according to cycle threshold (CT) values in high (≤25), intermediate (26-32) and low (>32). Adjusted analyses were performed to assess the role RV VL and RV/viral codetections on hospital admission, oxygen requirement, PICU care, and length of stay. Of 1,899 children with RV-ARI, 78% had chronic comorbidities and 24% RV/viral co-detections. Single RV vs RV/viral co-detections was associated with higher VL (24.74 vs 26.62 CT; p = 0.001) and older age (14.9 vs 9.5 months; p = 0.0001). Frequency of RV/viral co-detections were inversely proportional to RV loads: 32% with low; 28% with intermediate, and 19% with high VL, p = 0.0001. Underlying conditions were independently associated with all clinical outcomes, high VL with PICU care, and single RV-ARI with higher odds of hospitalization. In summary, single RV vs RV/viral co-detections were associated with higher VL and older age. Underlying diseases, rather than RV loads or RV/viral co-detections, consistently predicted worse clinical outcomes.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Medical Virology focuses on publishing original scientific papers on both basic and applied research related to viruses that affect humans. The journal publishes reports covering a wide range of topics, including the characterization, diagnosis, epidemiology, immunology, and pathogenesis of human virus infections. It also includes studies on virus morphology, genetics, replication, and interactions with host cells.
The intended readership of the journal includes virologists, microbiologists, immunologists, infectious disease specialists, diagnostic laboratory technologists, epidemiologists, hematologists, and cell biologists.
The Journal of Medical Virology is indexed and abstracted in various databases, including Abstracts in Anthropology (Sage), CABI, AgBiotech News & Information, National Agricultural Library, Biological Abstracts, Embase, Global Health, Web of Science, Veterinary Bulletin, and others.