Showing posts with label ARI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ARI. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 July 2016

Kids are virus factories...

UPDATE #1: 06JUL2016
Ms. Mohinder Sarna and Associate Professor Lambert have just recently published some cool data from a large and very heavily sampled respiratory virus-related study.

The new report comes from a large birth cohort study entitled the Observational Research in Childhood Infectious Diseases (ORChID) study. 

ORChID is a "longitudinal community-based dynamic birth cohort study of ARI [acute respiratory infection] episodes in children from birth to 2 years of age in the subtropical city of Brisbane, Australia". The study followed babies until they were two years old, taking weekly - yes, WEEKLY! - respiratory swabs and dirty nappy swabs and then tested the heck out of them for known viruses and bacteria. 

The testing results are not part of this report so use of the term "infection" is presumptive. For this study I would have preferred ARI=acute respiratory illness; URTI-upper respiratory tract illness; LRTI-lower respiratory tract illness. But infection is being used in the sense of the clinical picture, where a long history of literature and prior knowledge informs a medical doctor's definition of these acute illnesses as most likley due to virus infection

The details of the study's intentions were previously spelt out in Observational Research in Childhood Infectious Diseases (ORChID): a dynamic birth cohort study.[1]

But the topic of this post is the latest publication from this cohort study: The Burden of Community-Managed Acute Respiratory Infections in the First 2-Years of Life.[2; unfortunately it's paywalled but abstract is visible]. 

I'm not reviewing the whole thing today, I just wanted to pick out a couple of bits and a figure because it really exemplifies how often our little darlings become ill. These are generally mild illnesses and usually without any long term problems. Of course, that doesn't make the grown-ups on the receiving of an infant with a very transmissible virus all that much happier!

A couple of interesting things:

  • this is a community rather than hospital-based study which gives us a real snapshot of what happens in normal life - interpret that with the knowledge that infants were "from families of more advantaged backgrounds, which is common in longitudinal cohort studies"
  • otherwise healthy infants in this cohort had a distinct illness every 2 months on average; fewer during the first 6 or so months but more after that 
  • sampling density is phenomenal - weekly samples. Also a good participant retention rate and 78% of expected days were captured
  • antibiotics were prescribed in 21.9% of all ARI episodes - usually for acute otitis media (middle ear infection), and more often for a LRTI than an URTI
  • when antibiotics were prescribed for upper respiratory tract illnesses (well known to be overwhelmingly viral in nature and thus not targeted by an antibacterial drug), it was most often in family physician visit older male doctors
    Note: Table 4 in the paper should not have had "Antibiotics" indented-personal communication with thanks to A/Prof Lambert for clarifying
  • some minor illness may have been missed because symptoms including fever, mood change and poor feeding are hard to measure in this very young age group.
    "I say mother, I'm feeling a tad peaked this morning". Umm, no. More like "Waaah!"


Copyright © 1999-2016 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Publication: Pediatric Pulmonology; Content Title: The burden of
community-managed acute respiratory infections in the first 2-years of life;
Content authors: Mohinder Sarna,Robert S. Ware,Theo P. Sloots,
Michael D. Nissen, Keith Grimwood,Stephen B. Lambert.[2]
Reprinted with permission granted by Dr Sarna and RightsLink. License No. 3902730655132. 
Click on image to enlarge.
It will also be really interesting to see how often these children are infected but without a measurable illness resulting. 

What will the total number of infections look like in a year, in the community, among young children? More than a single infection every 2 months is my (highly biased) bet. That paper is coming, but unlike winter, it is not yet here.

Disclosure...

I have also been a little involved with this study during my previous life, as acknowledged elsewhere.[1]

References...
  1. Observational Research in Childhood Infectious Diseases (ORChID): a dynamic birth cohort study.
    http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/2/6/e002134.long
  2. The Burden of Community-Managed Acute Respiratory Infections in the First 2-Years of Life.
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ppul.23480/abstract
Updates...
  1. Author title changes

Monday, 26 August 2013

Editor's rant: Why testing the few may not benefit the many...

Prospective screening without regard for whether the person is sick. That's what I think we need more of, in order to truly understand respiratory viruses and acute respiratory infections (ARIs).

And I
 don't just mean the scary ones like MERS-CoV or influenza A(H5N1) virus or H7N9 or H7N7 (zoonotic flu). 

I also mean the rhinoviruses, influenza A(H3N2) virus, H1N1 (seasonal flu), endemic coronaviruses (CoV; 229E, OC43, NL63, HKU1), metapneumoviruses (MPV; I use the plural because there are 4 genotypes and who knows how many immunogenetically distinct clades), respiratory syncytial viruses (RSV; same plural), adenoviruses, enteroviruses, Saffold viruses, parechoviruses, polyomaviruses, bocaviruses...etc.

Sure, there have been studies in birth cohorts and in the community among "normal"'healthy people. But they sometimes have limitations that may blur our view of what is really happening in the community. For example, such studies may:

  • Exclude certain diseases that viruses are involved in.
  • Only sample when there are signs and symptoms of disease. 
  • Only call "disease" when a certain number or combination of symptoms are present (this one irks me no end - pedantically, if your body deviates from its physiological norms, you are diseased).
  • Sample too infrequently to catch whats going on between sampling points. We don't get one virus, recover, then get another - we're a virus's favourite hang out - but because of our awesome immune system, only some of those infections make us ill enough to stop and groan.
  • Employ insensitive detection methods (cell, tissue or organ culture). In fact, if a study used culture you might as well ignore those data - they will have missed many fastidious viruses (those that don't grow easily or in the cell lines used) rendering any conclusions associating detection of a virus and disease weak or wrong.
  • Sample for too short a period or just focus on a particular season etc. 
  • Only include a pet virus or a few viruses or just those viruses known about at the time. 
Much of our understanding of each virus comes from hospital-based studies. People in this environment, whether admitted (inpatients) or presenting but being allowed back home (outpatients), represent the "tip of the iceberg" of the disease spectrum. The pointy end. The most severe cases. We may make the assumption that the viruses circulating in the community are represented by what's happening in a hospital environment - or vice versa. But how often have we tested that? Do we know if there is a lag or lead time? Does it differ by climate? Could we go further and perhaps use those numbers to predict what the burden of disease in hospital will be this "season"?

And then there's the ongoing testing issue. Research dollars generally do not fund epidemiology. Certainly not ongoing epidemiology. Even big hospitals and private testing labs cannot afford the personnel and cost of testing all respiratory samples for all "likely" viral pathogens, all the time. "Likely" having been defined with the caveats above. 

And so our epidemiology data have holes. Big ones. We read of complaints about some countries not being able to identify a viral/bacterial cause (not that a POS lab test does prove cause) of pneumonia or encephalitis...but many patients in more "developed"countries also leave hospital without ever being attached to a lab-confirmed positive result. We could reduce that, even if we could not specifically treat them. And therein lies another issue. We test for some viruses based on historical precedent - do those precedents accurately stand up today? Do we even have the data to answer that? If you are a health professional, have a look at what your local testing lab offers - does it cater for the most likely causes of ARI or just what's been used before? 
Click image to enlarge. Respiratory virus infections among the community
and in hospital-based populations. Generally more males than females
present to hospital  with clinically-defined acute respiratory infections
(ARIs). Infections in the hospital setting are shown in red, those in the
community in orange.  Most ongoing virus testing is from
hospital-based populations as is our contemporary
understanding of viral season.

Notifiable viral diseases are kept track of, and if they occurred by themselves without interaction with, or interference from, other viruses that might be enough. But they don't. 

The "One World" concept of infectious disease study - looking at animals and humans and the environment together - is great; what about the concept of "One Virus"? The days of a study looking at just one virus and from that, without testing for any other respiratory virus that may cause the same signs and symptoms, concluding what that virus is capable of, it's severity and how many cases of disease are lessened by a drug for it, in a human should be far behind us. But they are not. 

So, do we really know the viruses that call us home? And if the answer is no, how can we possibly hope to be prepared for the next virus that emerges, the next local viral outbreak of ARI or encephalitis or gastroenteritis, or the next pandemic? How can we protect our population from viral threats if we're always on the back foot?

If I ruled the world, we would do more testing we'd try not to bias our attentions toward any 1 virus, we'd screen everything for everything, we'd sample the community, we'd make the data publicly available in real time, we'd understand ARI epidemiology better and we'd use all those data to prioritize some antiviral drug development or other viral interventions. At the very least, we'd re-jig our testing panels and create a new paradigm or 2.


But I don't rule the world - nor do I have input into these sorts of decisions - perhaps you do?


Feel free to weigh in below.

Thursday, 8 August 2013

Infection Prevention and Control measures for MERS..mostly as per other ARIs

Thanks to Mike Coston for help and tips.

Cases are few and details are incomplete but the authors of an article in the recent MERS-centric issue of the EMRO Journal, recommend following the basic protocols you would to suppress spread of any virus capable of causing an acute respiratory infection (ARI) with a leaning towards those that worked well to interrupt hospital-based spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus.

Some key points from the paper, of highest relevance to our current knowledge of the  MERS-CoV are  listed include (not in specific order or priority):

  1. Identify patients with ARIs and prevent them from transmisttign the agent to helathcare worklers and patients
  2. Droplet and contact precautions for people with ARIs
  3. Separate ARI patients by ≥1m from other patients and from HCWs
  4. Use personal protective equipment (PPE) including eye protection, gloves, long-sleeved gowns and surgical mask/procedure mask/particulate respirator if aerosol-generating procedures are to be performed (tracheal intubation alone or with cardiopulmonary resuscitation or bronchoscopy being notable risks)
Mike Coston's description of the mask debate is very helpful for #4 above.

If a particular infectious diagnosis can be made, then patients with that diagnosis, say MERS-CoV,  can be cohorted - co-located to minimize spread to uninfected patients and maximise specialised care and efficient use of available resources.

Specifically, the article includes a list of SARS-like IPC precautions listed include which may be useful for known MERS-CoV infections. Many of these apply to ARIs due to endemic respiratory viruses and novel influenza viruses in general though:

  • Good hand hygiene
  • Use of PPE (gloves, gown, eye protection and medical masks for HCWs, caregivers and the patient if oputside their room
  • Particulate respirator for aerosol generating procedures
  • Separate, adequately ventilated room
While the above is written for dealing with infection in a healthcare setting, the WHO have also just released a rapid advice document for those caring for mildly ill MERS-CoV-infected people without underlying conditions, or those recently discharged from hospital. A mashup of 16 distinct points (read the document to see the full language and exceptions) home IPC are:

  • Limit contact with the ill person - maintain distance (perhaps limit exposure time?). 
  • Do not allow people at increased risk to care for the ill person
  • Hand hygiene and respiratory hygiene are important as are appropriate (soap and water, bl;each as recommended) cleaning of all surfaces in contact with the person or their secretions - kitchen, bathroom, toilet, bedframe, bedside tables, furniture etc
  • Discard contaminated tissues, masks etc
  • Clean clothes
  • Do not share eating utensils food or drionk, towels or bed linen
  • Caregiver to wear a mask - discard after use and do not handle while in use
  • Ventilate shared spaces

Close medical supervision is recommended for symptomatic or probable MERS cases and their contacts.

The WHO home care advice also notes lack of evidence for transmission of MERS (the disease) from asymptomatic, pre-symptomatic or early-symptomatic people. Thus quarantine or isolation of asymptomatic cases is currently unnecessary but possibly exposed people should monitor their health for 14-days.


Key documents and official websites to be familiar with: