Epidemiology of human metapneumovirus among children with severe or very severe pneumonia in high pneumonia burden settings: the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) study experience. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • OBJECTIVES: After respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), human metapneumovirus (hMPV) was the second-ranked pathogen attributed to severe pneumonia in the PERCH study. We sought to characterize hMPV-positive cases in high-burden settings, which have limited data, by comparing with RSV-positive and other cases. METHODS: Children aged 1-59 months hospitalized with suspected severe pneumonia and age/season-matched community controls in seven African and Asian countries had nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal swabs tested by multiplex PCR for 32 respiratory pathogens, among other clinical and lab assessments at admission. Odds ratios adjusted for age and site (adjusted OR [aOR]) were calculated using logistic regression. Aetiologic probability was estimated using Bayesian nested partial latent class analysis. Latent class analysis identified syndromic constellations of clinical characteristics. RESULTS: hMPV was detected more frequently among cases (267/3887, 6.9%) than controls (115/4976, 2.3%), among cases with pneumonia chest X-ray findings (8.5%) than without (5.5%), and among controls with respiratory tract illness (3.8%) than without (1.8%; all p ≤ 0.001). HMPV-positive cases were negatively associated with the detection of other viruses (aOR, 0.18), especially RSV (aOR, 0.11; all p < 0.0001), and positively associated with the detection of bacteria (aORs, 1.77; p 0.03). No single clinical syndrome distinguished hMPV-positive from other cases. Among hMPV-positive cases, 65.2% were aged <1 year and 27.5% had pneumonia danger signs; positive predictive value for hMPV aetiology was 74.5%; mortality was 3.9%, similar to RSV-positive (2.4%) and lower than that among other cases (9.6%). DISCUSSION: HMPV-associated severe paediatric pneumonia in high-burden settings was predominantly in young infants and clinically indistinguishable from RSV. HMPV-positives had low case fatality, similar to that in RSV-positives.

authors

  • Miyakawa, Ryo
  • Zhang, Haijun
  • Brooks, W Abdullah
  • Prosperi, Christine
  • Baggett, Henry C
  • Feikin, Daniel R
  • Hammitt, Laura L
  • Howie, Stephen R C
  • Kotloff, Karen L
  • Levine, Orin S
  • Madhi, Shabir A
  • Murdoch, David R
  • O'Brien, Katherine L
  • Scott, J Anthony G
  • Thea, Donald M
  • Antonio, Martin
  • Awori, Juliet O
  • Bunthi, Charatdao
  • Driscoll, Amanda J
  • Ebruke, Bernard
  • Fancourt, Nicholas S
  • Higdon, Melissa M
  • Karron, Ruth A
  • Moore, David P
  • Morpeth, Susan C
  • Mulindwa, Justin M
  • Park, Daniel E
  • Rahman, Mohammed Ziaur
  • Rahman, Mustafizur
  • Salaudeen, Rasheed A
  • Sawatwong, Pongpun
  • Seidenberg, Phil
  • Sow, Samba O
  • Tapia, Milagritos D
  • Deloria Knoll, Maria

publication date

  • November 1, 2024

Research

keywords

  • Metapneumovirus
  • Paramyxoviridae Infections
  • Pneumonia
  • Pneumonia, Viral

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC13076004

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85210129111

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.cmi.2024.10.023

PubMed ID

  • 39489292

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 31

issue

  • 3