Schrag Stephanie J, Shay David K, Gershman Ken, Thomas Ann, Craig Allen S, Schaffner William, Harrison Lee H, Vugia Duc, Clogher Paula, Lynfield Ruth, Farley Monica, Zansky Shelley, Uyeki Timothy
National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2006 May;25(5):395-400. doi: 10.1097/01.inf.0000214988.81379.71.
Increasing use of rapid influenza diagnostics facilitates laboratory confirmation of influenza infections. We describe laboratory-confirmed, influenza-associated hospitalizations in a population representing almost 6% of children in the United States.
We conducted population-based surveillance for influenza-associated hospitalizations between October 1, 2003, and March 31, 2004, in 54 counties in 9 states (4.2 million children) participating in the Emerging Infections Program Network. Clinical characteristics, predictors of intensive care unit admission and geographic and age-specific incidence were evaluated.
Surveillance identified 1,308 case-patients; 80% were <5 years and 27% were <6 months of age. Half of the patients and 4 of 5 pediatric deaths did not have a medical indication for influenza vaccination and were outside the 6- to 23-month age group. Twenty-eight percent of case-patients had radiographic evidence of a pulmonary infiltrate, 11% were admitted to intensive care and 3% received mechanical ventilation. The median length of hospital stay was 2 days. Community-acquired invasive bacterial coinfections (1% of patients) were associated with intensive care admission (adjusted odds ratio, 16.9; 95% confidence interval, 5.0-56.8). Thirty-five percent of patients >or=6 months old had received at least one influenza vaccine dose that season. The overall incidence of influenza-associated hospitalizations was 36 per 100,000 children (range per state, 10 per 100,000 to 86 per 100,000).
Influenza was an important cause of hospitalizations in children during 2003-2004. Hospitalizations were particularly common among children <6 months of age, a group for whom influenza vaccine is not licensed. Continued surveillance for laboratory-confirmed influenza could inform prevention strategies.
快速流感诊断方法的使用日益增加,这有助于对流感感染进行实验室确诊。我们描述了在美国近6%儿童群体中经实验室确诊的流感相关住院病例情况。
2003年10月1日至2004年3月31日期间,我们在参与新发传染病项目网络的9个州的54个县(420万儿童)中开展了基于人群的流感相关住院病例监测。对临床特征、重症监护病房收治的预测因素以及地理和年龄特异性发病率进行了评估。
监测共识别出1308例病例;80%年龄小于5岁,27%年龄小于6个月。半数患者以及5例儿科死亡病例中的4例没有接种流感疫苗的医学指征,且不在6至23月龄年龄组范围内。28%的病例有肺部浸润的影像学证据,11%入住重症监护病房,3%接受机械通气。住院时间中位数为2天。社区获得性侵袭性细菌合并感染(占患者的1%)与重症监护病房收治相关(校正比值比为16.9;95%置信区间为5.0 - 56.8)。35%年龄大于或等于6个月的患者在该季节至少接种过一剂流感疫苗。流感相关住院的总体发病率为每10万名儿童36例(每个州的发病率范围为每10万名儿童10例至86例)。
流感是2003 - 2004年期间儿童住院的重要原因。住院情况在6个月以下儿童中尤为常见,而该年龄组尚无获批的流感疫苗。持续监测经实验室确诊的流感病例可为预防策略提供依据。