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Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study

(1) Immunization with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines has decreased the burden of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children and likely led to a shift in CAP etiology. (2) The Trial of Respiratory infections in children for ENhanced Diagnostics (TREND) enrolled children 1-59 months with clinical...

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Autores principales: Eklundh, Annika, Rhedin, Samuel, Ryd-Rinder, Malin, Andersson, Maria, Gantelius, Jesper, Gaudenzi, Giulia, Lindh, Magnus, Peltola, Ville, Waris, Matti, Nauclér, Pontus, Mårtensson, Andreas, Alfvén, Tobias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8070909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33919904
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9040384
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author Eklundh, Annika
Rhedin, Samuel
Ryd-Rinder, Malin
Andersson, Maria
Gantelius, Jesper
Gaudenzi, Giulia
Lindh, Magnus
Peltola, Ville
Waris, Matti
Nauclér, Pontus
Mårtensson, Andreas
Alfvén, Tobias
author_facet Eklundh, Annika
Rhedin, Samuel
Ryd-Rinder, Malin
Andersson, Maria
Gantelius, Jesper
Gaudenzi, Giulia
Lindh, Magnus
Peltola, Ville
Waris, Matti
Nauclér, Pontus
Mårtensson, Andreas
Alfvén, Tobias
author_sort Eklundh, Annika
collection PubMed
description (1) Immunization with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines has decreased the burden of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children and likely led to a shift in CAP etiology. (2) The Trial of Respiratory infections in children for ENhanced Diagnostics (TREND) enrolled children 1-59 months with clinical CAP according to the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria at Sachs’ Children and Youth Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. Children with rhonchi and indrawing underwent “bronchodilator challenge”. C-reactive protein and nasopharyngeal PCR detecting 20 respiratory pathogens, were collected from all children. Etiology was defined according to an a priori defined algorithm based on microbiological, biochemical, and radiological findings. (3) Of 327 enrolled children, 107 (32%) required hospitalization; 91 (28%) received antibiotic treatment; 77 (24%) had a chest X-ray performed; and 60 (18%) responded to bronchodilator challenge. 243 (74%) episodes were classified as viral, 11 (3%) as mixed viral-bacterial, five (2%) as bacterial, two (0.6%) as atypical bacterial and 66 (20%) as undetermined etiology. After exclusion of children responding to bronchodilator challenge, the proportion of bacterial and mixed viral-bacterial etiology was 1% and 4%, respectively. (4) The novel TREND etiology algorithm classified the majority of clinical CAP episodes as of viral etiology, whereas bacterial etiology was uncommon. Defining CAP in children <5 years is challenging, and the WHO definition of clinical CAP is not suitable for use in children immunized with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines.
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spelling pubmed-80709092021-04-26 Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study Eklundh, Annika Rhedin, Samuel Ryd-Rinder, Malin Andersson, Maria Gantelius, Jesper Gaudenzi, Giulia Lindh, Magnus Peltola, Ville Waris, Matti Nauclér, Pontus Mårtensson, Andreas Alfvén, Tobias Vaccines (Basel) Article (1) Immunization with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines has decreased the burden of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children and likely led to a shift in CAP etiology. (2) The Trial of Respiratory infections in children for ENhanced Diagnostics (TREND) enrolled children 1-59 months with clinical CAP according to the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria at Sachs’ Children and Youth Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. Children with rhonchi and indrawing underwent “bronchodilator challenge”. C-reactive protein and nasopharyngeal PCR detecting 20 respiratory pathogens, were collected from all children. Etiology was defined according to an a priori defined algorithm based on microbiological, biochemical, and radiological findings. (3) Of 327 enrolled children, 107 (32%) required hospitalization; 91 (28%) received antibiotic treatment; 77 (24%) had a chest X-ray performed; and 60 (18%) responded to bronchodilator challenge. 243 (74%) episodes were classified as viral, 11 (3%) as mixed viral-bacterial, five (2%) as bacterial, two (0.6%) as atypical bacterial and 66 (20%) as undetermined etiology. After exclusion of children responding to bronchodilator challenge, the proportion of bacterial and mixed viral-bacterial etiology was 1% and 4%, respectively. (4) The novel TREND etiology algorithm classified the majority of clinical CAP episodes as of viral etiology, whereas bacterial etiology was uncommon. Defining CAP in children <5 years is challenging, and the WHO definition of clinical CAP is not suitable for use in children immunized with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines. MDPI 2021-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8070909/ /pubmed/33919904 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9040384 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Eklundh, Annika
Rhedin, Samuel
Ryd-Rinder, Malin
Andersson, Maria
Gantelius, Jesper
Gaudenzi, Giulia
Lindh, Magnus
Peltola, Ville
Waris, Matti
Nauclér, Pontus
Mårtensson, Andreas
Alfvén, Tobias
Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study
title Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study
title_full Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study
title_fullStr Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study
title_full_unstemmed Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study
title_short Etiology of Clinical Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Swedish Children Aged 1–59 Months with High Pneumococcal Vaccine Coverage—The TREND Study
title_sort etiology of clinical community-acquired pneumonia in swedish children aged 1–59 months with high pneumococcal vaccine coverage—the trend study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8070909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33919904
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9040384
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