Oliveira Fernanda Esthefane Garrides, Bastos Leonardo, de Oliveira Raquel de Vasconcellos Carvalhães, Santos Heloísa Ferreira Pinto, Damasceno Luana Santana, Franco Luiza Sales, Carvalho Liege Maria Abreu de, Fuller Trevon Louis, Guaraldo Lusiele, Carvalho Marilia, Brasil Patrícia
Oswaldo Cruz Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Scientific Computing Program, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jul 6;15(7):e095622. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-095622.
COVID-19 in children is generally of short duration, but some may take longer to recover. This study investigated the time to symptom resolution following SARS-CoV-2 infection among children in a community setting on the outskirts of an urban centre in Brazil.
Prospective cohort study.
This is a community-based cohort of children living in Manguinhos, a favela in Rio de Janeiro. The cohort was followed through home visits and telephone monitoring of symptoms. The analysis focused on symptomatic children from this cohort with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. Recovery time was defined as the interval between the first date with symptoms and the first date without symptoms following a positive SARS-CoV-2 test.
A total of 1276 children (boys and girls aged 2-<14 years) were recruited between 2020 and 2022, with 253 testing positive for SARS-CoV-2. The inclusion criterion was SARS-CoV-2-positive children, while the exclusion criteria were loss to follow-up and asymptomatic cases during the acute phase of COVID-19.
COVID-19 recovery time, assessed based on change points on the symptom persistence probability curve (Kaplan-Meier).
Among children who tested positive, 148 (60%) were symptomatic. The median recovery time was 11 days (IQR: 7-16). Two inflection points were identified on the Kaplan-Meier curve: days 16 and 34. Children who were ill during the Omicron wave took longer to recover. More boys became asymptomatic within the first 15 days; about 93% of girls recovered by day 33, and boys were more common among those who recovered in ≥34 days. Children aged 6-<14 years often recovered within 2 weeks; however, both this group and the 2-<6 years group constituted the majority of those with delayed recovery.
Among children from a vulnerable area in Rio de Janeiro, recovery time was longer than that reported in other countries, with 9.5% of children experiencing persistent symptoms for more than 33 days. These findings are crucial for understanding the implications of COVID-19 in specific socioeconomic contexts and the dynamics of paediatric recovery in community settings.
儿童感染新冠病毒后的病程通常较短,但部分儿童可能需要更长时间才能康复。本研究调查了巴西一个城市中心郊区社区环境中儿童感染新冠病毒后症状缓解的时间。
前瞻性队列研究。
这是一项针对居住在里约热内卢一个贫民窟曼古inhos的儿童的社区队列研究。通过家访和电话监测症状对该队列进行随访。分析聚焦于该队列中确诊感染新冠病毒的有症状儿童。康复时间定义为新冠病毒检测呈阳性后出现症状的首日与无症状的首日之间的间隔。
2020年至2022年期间共招募了1276名儿童(2至<14岁的男孩和女孩),其中253人新冠病毒检测呈阳性。纳入标准为新冠病毒检测呈阳性的儿童,排除标准为随访失访和新冠病毒急性期无症状病例。
基于症状持续概率曲线(Kaplan-Meier)的变化点评估新冠病毒康复时间。
在检测呈阳性的儿童中,148名(60%)有症状。中位康复时间为11天(四分位间距:7 - 16天)。在Kaplan-Meier曲线上确定了两个拐点:第16天和第34天。在奥密克戎毒株流行期间患病的儿童康复时间更长。更多男孩在头15天内转为无症状;约93%的女孩在第33天前康复,在≥34天康复的儿童中男孩更为常见。6至<14岁的儿童通常在2周内康复;然而,该年龄组和2至<6岁年龄组均占延迟康复儿童的大多数。
在里约热内卢一个弱势群体居住地区的儿童中,康复时间比其他国家报告的更长,9.5%的儿童持续症状超过33天。这些发现对于理解新冠病毒在特定社会经济背景下的影响以及社区环境中儿童康复动态至关重要。