NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Gastrointestinal Infections, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Institute of Population Health, University of Liverpool, 2nd Floor, Block F, Waterhouse Buildings, 1-5 Brownlow Street, Liverpool, L69 3GL, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Jul 20;22(1):1393. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13771-z.
Children are important transmitters of norovirus infection and there is evidence that laboratory reports in children increase earlier in the norovirus season than in adults. This raises the question as to whether cases and outbreaks in children could provide an early warning of seasonal norovirus before cases start increasing in older, more vulnerable age groups.
This study uses weekly national surveillance data on reported outbreaks within schools, care homes and hospitals, general practice (GP) consultations for infectious intestinal disease (IID), telehealth calls for diarrhoea and/or vomiting and laboratory norovirus reports from across England, UK for nine norovirus seasons (2010/11-2018/19). Lagged correlation analysis was undertaken to identify lead or lag times between cases in children and those in adults for each surveillance dataset. A partial correlation analysis explored whether school outbreaks provided a lead time ahead of other surveillance indicators, controlling for breaks in the data due to school holidays. A breakpoint analysis was used to identify which surveillance indicator and age group provided the earliest warning of the norovirus season each year.
School outbreaks occurred 3-weeks before care home and hospital outbreaks, norovirus laboratory reports and NHS 111 calls for diarrhoea, and provided a 2-week lead time ahead of NHS 111 calls for vomiting. Children provided a lead time ahead of adults for norovirus laboratory reports (+ 1-2 weeks), NHS 111 calls for vomiting (+ 1 week) and NHS 111 calls for diarrhoea (+ 1 week) but occurred concurrently with adults for GP consultations. Breakpoint analysis revealed an earlier seasonal increase in cases among children compared to adults for laboratory, GP and NHS 111 data, with school outbreaks increasing earlier than other surveillance indicators in five out of nine surveillance years.
These findings suggest that monitoring cases and outbreaks of norovirus in children could provide an early warning of seasonal norovirus infection. However, both school outbreak data and syndromic surveillance data are not norovirus specific and will also capture other causes of IID. The use of school outbreak data as an early warning indicator may be improved by enhancing sampling in community outbreaks to confirm the causative organism.
儿童是诺如病毒感染的重要传播者,有证据表明,儿童的实验室报告在诺如病毒季节比成人更早增加。这就提出了一个问题,即在年龄较大、更脆弱的人群中病例开始增加之前,儿童中的病例和暴发是否可以为季节性诺如病毒提供早期预警。
本研究使用了英国英格兰每周全国监测数据,包括学校、护理院和医院内报告的暴发、全科医生(GP)传染性肠道疾病(IID)就诊、远程医疗腹泻和/或呕吐就诊以及来自英国的实验室诺如病毒报告,涵盖了九个诺如病毒季节(2010/11-2018/19 年)。采用滞后相关分析确定了每个监测数据集儿童病例与成人病例之间的领先或滞后时间。部分相关分析探讨了在控制因学校假期而导致的数据中断的情况下,学校暴发是否为其他监测指标提供了提前期。断点分析用于确定每年哪种监测指标和年龄组对诺如病毒季节的预警最早。
学校暴发发生在护理院和医院暴发、诺如病毒实验室报告和 NHS 111 腹泻就诊前 3 周,且比 NHS 111 呕吐就诊提前 2 周。儿童比成人提前提供诺如病毒实验室报告(+1-2 周)、NHS 111 呕吐就诊(+1 周)和 NHS 111 腹泻就诊(+1 周)的提前期,但与成人同时发生 GP 就诊。断点分析显示,与成人相比,儿童的实验室、GP 和 NHS 111 数据中季节性病例增加更早,在九个监测年份中的五个年份中,学校暴发比其他监测指标更早增加。
这些发现表明,监测儿童中的诺如病毒病例和暴发可能为季节性诺如病毒感染提供早期预警。然而,学校暴发数据和综合征监测数据都不是诺如病毒特异性的,也会捕获其他 IID 的病因。通过加强社区暴发中的采样以确认病原体,使用学校暴发数据作为早期预警指标可能会得到改善。