Nascimento-Carvalho Amanda C, Ruuskanen Olli, Nascimento-Carvalho Cristiana M
Bahiana School of Medicine, Bahiana Foundation for Science Development, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil.
Department of Paediatrics, Turku University and University Hospital, Turku, Finland.
BMC Pediatr. 2016 Jul 22;16:105. doi: 10.1186/s12887-016-0645-3.
The comparison of the frequencies of bacterial and viral infections among children with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) admitted in distinct severity categories, in an original study, is lacking in literature to-date. We aimed to achieve this goal.
Children aged 2-59-months-old hospitalized with CAP were included in this prospective study in Salvador, Brazil. Clinical data and biological samples were collected to investigate 11 viruses and 8 bacteria. Severity was assessed by using the World Health Organization criteria.
One hundred eighty-one patients were classified as "non-severe" (n = 53; 29.3 %), "severe" (n = 111; 61.3 %), or "very severe" (n = 17; 9.4 %) CAP. Overall, aetiology was detected among 156 (86.2 %) cases; viral (n = 84; 46.4 %), bacterial (n = 26; 14.4 %) and viral-bacterial (n = 46; 25.4 %) infections were identified. Viral infection frequency was similar in severe/very severe and non-severe cases (46.1 % vs. 47.2 %; p = 0.9). Pneumococcal infection increased across "non-severe" (13.2 %), "severe" (23.4 %), and "very severe" (35.3 %) cases (qui-squared test for trend p = 0.04). Among patients with detected aetiology, after excluding cases with co-infection, the frequency of sole bacterial infection was different (p = 0.04) among the categories; non-severe (12.5 %), severe (29.3 %) or very severe (55.6 %). Among these patients, sole bacterial infection was independently associated with severity (OR = 4.4 [95 % CI:1.1-17.6]; p = 0.04) in a model controlled for age (OR = 0.7 [95 % CI:0.5-1.1]; p = 0.1).
A substantial proportion of cases in distinct severity subgroups had respiratory viral infections, which did not differ between severity categories. Bacterial infection, particularly pneumococcal infection, was more likely among severe/very severe cases.
在一项原创研究中,目前文献中缺乏对不同严重程度分类的社区获得性肺炎(CAP)患儿中细菌和病毒感染频率的比较。我们旨在实现这一目标。
本前瞻性研究纳入了巴西萨尔瓦多2至59个月大因CAP住院的儿童。收集临床数据和生物样本以检测11种病毒和8种细菌。使用世界卫生组织标准评估严重程度。
181例患者被分类为“非严重”(n = 53;29.3%)、“严重”(n = 111;61.3%)或“非常严重”(n = 17;9.4%)的CAP。总体而言,156例(86.2%)病例中检测到病因;确定为病毒感染(n = 84;46.4%)、细菌感染(n = 26;14.4%)和病毒-细菌混合感染(n = 46;25.4%)。严重/非常严重病例和非严重病例中的病毒感染频率相似(46.1%对47.2%;p = 0.9)。肺炎球菌感染在“非严重”(13.2%)、“严重”(23.4%)和“非常严重”(35.3%)病例中呈上升趋势(趋势卡方检验p = 0.04)。在检测到病因的患者中,排除合并感染病例后,不同分类中单纯细菌感染的频率不同(p = 0.04);非严重(12.5%)、严重(29.3%)或非常严重(55.6%)。在这些患者中,在控制年龄的模型中,单纯细菌感染与严重程度独立相关(OR = 4.4 [95% CI:1.1 - 17.6];p = 0.04)(OR = 0.7 [95% CI:0.5 - 1.1];p = 0.1)。
不同严重程度亚组中的相当一部分病例患有呼吸道病毒感染,不同严重程度分类之间无差异。细菌感染,尤其是肺炎球菌感染,在严重/非常严重病例中更常见。