Background Although recent studies have identified new group C human rhinoviruses (HRVCs), their spectrum of pediatric disease is unknown. Objective We sought to determine the presentation and burden of disease caused by HRVCs among young hospitalized children. Methods We conducted prospective population-based surveillance in 2 US counties among children less than 5 years of age hospitalized with acute respiratory illness or fever from October 2001 through September 2003. Nasal/throat swabs were obtained and tested for HRVs, as determined by means of RT-PCR and then characterized by means of partial sequencing. Results Of 1052 children enrolled and tested during the 2-year period, 167 (16%) had HRVs detected. Of 147 samples successfully sequenced, 64 were group A HRVs, 6 were group B HRVs, and 77 were HRVCs. Children with HRVCs were significantly more likely than those with group A HRVs to have underlying high-risk conditions, such as asthma (42% vs 23%, P = .023) and to have had a discharge diagnosis of asthma (55% vs 36%, P = .022). Conclusions Overall, HRVCs were detected in 7% of children hospitalized for fever or respiratory conditions and constituted almost half of all rhinovirus-associated hospitalizations, suggesting that this novel group causes a substantial burden of pediatric disease.
A novel group of rhinoviruses is associated with asthma hospitalizations
E. Miller,K. Edwards,G. Weinberg,M. Iwane,M. Griffin,C. Hall,Yuwei Zhu,P. Szilagyi,Laura-Lee Morin,L. Heil,Xiaoyan Lu,John V. Williams
Published 2008 in Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2008
- Venue
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
- Publication date
2008-11-22
- Fields of study
Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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