Wu Xiaodong, Wang Qin, Wang Min, Su Xin, Xing Zheng, Zhang Weiyun, Shi Yi
Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Jinling Hospital, Medical School of Nanjing University, Nanjing, China.
Respiration. 2015;89(4):343-52. doi: 10.1159/000369561. Epub 2015 Mar 12.
With the development of more rapid and sensitive detection methods based on PCR techniques, the contributions of respiratory viral infections to community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in adult patients are being more and more recognized. Yet, up to now, there has been a lack of synthetic data that clearly demonstrates the incidence of respiratory viral infections in adult patients with CAP.
We intended to demonstrate the incidence of respiratory viral infections detected by PCR and real-time PCR in adult patients with CAP.
We searched PubMed and Embase for studies providing the incidence of respiratory viral infections in adult patients with CAP. We investigated potential sources of heterogeneity by a univariant metaregression analysis and calculated the combined incidence of viral infections, viral infections mixed with other pathogens and individual respiratory virus species.
We eventually identified 23 eligible reports with a total number of 6,404 patients. Incidences ranged from 8.6 to 56.2% for overall respiratory viral infections. We noted significant heterogeneity in incidence estimates for the incidence of viral infections (Cochran's χ(2) = 269.9, p < 0.0001, I(2) = 91.8%). The combined incidence of viral infections was 22.4% (95% CI = 19.0-25.7). Incidences of viral coinfections with other pathogens ranged from 3 to 28%. A high level of heterogeneity was identified as well during the estimates for incidences of coinfections (χ(2) = 200.9, p < 0.0001, I(2) = 91.5%). The combined incidence of viral coinfections with other pathogens was 12.4% (95% CI = 9.7-15.0). Our heterogeneity analyses suggested that a lower respiratory tract sample was associated with higher overall viral incidence. Moreover, the influenza virus, rhinovirus and coronavirus were the 3 most frequently detected viral pathogens in adult patients with CAP according to our study.
Respiratory viruses are probably crucial pathogens of adult patients with CAP, with the influenza virus being the most frequent viral pathogen identified. More than half of the viral infections are characterized as mixed infections with other pathogens.
随着基于聚合酶链反应(PCR)技术的更快速、灵敏检测方法的发展,呼吸道病毒感染在成年社区获得性肺炎(CAP)患者中的作用越来越受到认可。然而,截至目前,仍缺乏能清晰显示成年CAP患者呼吸道病毒感染发病率的综合数据。
我们旨在证实通过PCR和实时PCR检测出的成年CAP患者呼吸道病毒感染的发病率。
我们在PubMed和Embase数据库中检索有关成年CAP患者呼吸道病毒感染发病率的研究。通过单变量Meta回归分析调查异质性的潜在来源,并计算病毒感染、病毒与其他病原体混合感染以及各呼吸道病毒种类的合并发病率。
我们最终确定了23篇符合条件的报告,涉及患者总数为6404例。总体呼吸道病毒感染的发病率在8.6%至56.2%之间。我们注意到病毒感染发病率估计值存在显著异质性(Cochran卡方检验χ(2)=269.9,p<0.0001,I(2)=91.8%)。病毒感染的合并发病率为22.4%(95%置信区间=19.0-25.7)。病毒与其他病原体合并感染的发病率在3%至28%之间。在合并感染发病率估计过程中也发现了高度异质性(χ(2)=200.9,p<0.0001,I(2)=91.5%)。病毒与其他病原体合并感染的合并发病率为12.4%(95%置信区间=9.7-15.0)。我们的异质性分析表明,下呼吸道样本与总体病毒发病率较高相关。此外,根据我们的研究,流感病毒、鼻病毒和冠状病毒是成年CAP患者中最常检测到的3种病毒病原体。
呼吸道病毒可能是成年CAP患者的关键病原体,流感病毒是最常鉴定出的病毒病原体。超过一半的病毒感染为与其他病原体的混合感染。