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Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection among infants and young children, resulting in annual epidemics worldwide. INFORM-RSV is a multiyear clinical study designed to describe the global molecular epidemiology of RSV in children under 5 years of a...

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Autores principales: Tabor, David E., Fernandes, Fiona, Langedijk, Annefleur C., Wilkins, Deidre, Lebbink, Robert Jan, Tovchigrechko, Andrey, Ruzin, Alexey, Kragten-Tabatabaie, Leyla, Jin, Hong, Esser, Mark T., Bont, Louis J., Abram, Michael E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7771447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33087438
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01828-20
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author Tabor, David E.
Fernandes, Fiona
Langedijk, Annefleur C.
Wilkins, Deidre
Lebbink, Robert Jan
Tovchigrechko, Andrey
Ruzin, Alexey
Kragten-Tabatabaie, Leyla
Jin, Hong
Esser, Mark T.
Bont, Louis J.
Abram, Michael E.
author_facet Tabor, David E.
Fernandes, Fiona
Langedijk, Annefleur C.
Wilkins, Deidre
Lebbink, Robert Jan
Tovchigrechko, Andrey
Ruzin, Alexey
Kragten-Tabatabaie, Leyla
Jin, Hong
Esser, Mark T.
Bont, Louis J.
Abram, Michael E.
author_sort Tabor, David E.
collection PubMed
description Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection among infants and young children, resulting in annual epidemics worldwide. INFORM-RSV is a multiyear clinical study designed to describe the global molecular epidemiology of RSV in children under 5 years of age by monitoring temporal and geographical evolution of current circulating RSV strains, F protein antigenic sites, and their relationships with clinical features of RSV disease. During the pilot season (2017–2018), 410 RSV G-F gene sequences were obtained from 476 RSV-positive nasal samples collected from 8 countries (United Kingdom, Spain, The Netherlands, Finland, Japan, Brazil, South Africa, and Australia). RSV B (all BA9 genotype) predominated over RSV A (all ON1 genotype) globally (69.0% versus 31.0%) and in all countries except South Africa. Geographic clustering patterns highlighted wide transmission and continued evolution with viral spread. Most RSV strains were from infants of <1 year of age (81.2%), males (56.3%), and patients hospitalized for >24 h (70.5%), with no differences in subtype distribution. Compared to 2013 reference sequences, variations at F protein antigenic sites were observed for both RSV A and B strains, with high-frequency polymorphisms at antigenic site Ø (I206M/Q209R) and site V (L172Q/S173L/K191R) in RSV B strains. The INFORM-RSV 2017–2018 pilot season establishes an important molecular baseline of RSV strain distribution and sequence variability with which to track the emergence of new strains and provide an early warning system of neutralization escape variants that may impact transmission or the effectiveness of vaccines and MAbs under development.
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spelling pubmed-77714472021-06-17 Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study Tabor, David E. Fernandes, Fiona Langedijk, Annefleur C. Wilkins, Deidre Lebbink, Robert Jan Tovchigrechko, Andrey Ruzin, Alexey Kragten-Tabatabaie, Leyla Jin, Hong Esser, Mark T. Bont, Louis J. Abram, Michael E. J Clin Microbiol Epidemiology Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection among infants and young children, resulting in annual epidemics worldwide. INFORM-RSV is a multiyear clinical study designed to describe the global molecular epidemiology of RSV in children under 5 years of age by monitoring temporal and geographical evolution of current circulating RSV strains, F protein antigenic sites, and their relationships with clinical features of RSV disease. During the pilot season (2017–2018), 410 RSV G-F gene sequences were obtained from 476 RSV-positive nasal samples collected from 8 countries (United Kingdom, Spain, The Netherlands, Finland, Japan, Brazil, South Africa, and Australia). RSV B (all BA9 genotype) predominated over RSV A (all ON1 genotype) globally (69.0% versus 31.0%) and in all countries except South Africa. Geographic clustering patterns highlighted wide transmission and continued evolution with viral spread. Most RSV strains were from infants of <1 year of age (81.2%), males (56.3%), and patients hospitalized for >24 h (70.5%), with no differences in subtype distribution. Compared to 2013 reference sequences, variations at F protein antigenic sites were observed for both RSV A and B strains, with high-frequency polymorphisms at antigenic site Ø (I206M/Q209R) and site V (L172Q/S173L/K191R) in RSV B strains. The INFORM-RSV 2017–2018 pilot season establishes an important molecular baseline of RSV strain distribution and sequence variability with which to track the emergence of new strains and provide an early warning system of neutralization escape variants that may impact transmission or the effectiveness of vaccines and MAbs under development. American Society for Microbiology 2020-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7771447/ /pubmed/33087438 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01828-20 Text en Copyright © 2020 Tabor et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Epidemiology
Tabor, David E.
Fernandes, Fiona
Langedijk, Annefleur C.
Wilkins, Deidre
Lebbink, Robert Jan
Tovchigrechko, Andrey
Ruzin, Alexey
Kragten-Tabatabaie, Leyla
Jin, Hong
Esser, Mark T.
Bont, Louis J.
Abram, Michael E.
Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study
title Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study
title_full Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study
title_fullStr Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study
title_full_unstemmed Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study
title_short Global Molecular Epidemiology of Respiratory Syncytial Virus from the 2017−2018 INFORM-RSV Study
title_sort global molecular epidemiology of respiratory syncytial virus from the 2017−2018 inform-rsv study
topic Epidemiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7771447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33087438
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01828-20
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