4.6 Article

Influenza-Associated Neurologic Complications in Hospitalized Children

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JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
卷 239, 期 -, 页码 24-+

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MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2021.07.039

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This study found that influenza-associated neurologic complications are common in children hospitalized with influenza. Seizures and encephalopathy were the most commonly identified complications, and children with pre-existing neurologic diagnoses had a higher proportion of these complications. The study suggests that vaccination, lack of seasonal influenza vaccination, and age <= 5 years are independently associated with influenza-associated neurologic complications.
Objectives To define the incidence and characteristics of influenza-associated neurologic complications in a cohort of children hospitalized at a tertiary care pediatric hospital with laboratory-confirmed influenza and to identify associated clinical, epidemiologic, and virologic factors. Study design This was an historical cohort study of children aged 0.5-18.0 years old hospitalized between 2010 and 2017 with laboratory-confirmed influenza. Children with immune compromise or a positive test due to recent receipt of live virus vaccine or recently resolved illness were excluded. Influenza-associated neurologic complications were defined as new-onset neurologic signs/symptoms during acute influenza illness without another clear etiology. Results At least 1 influenza-associated neurologic complication was identified in 10.8% (95% CI 9.1-12.6%, n = 131 of 1217) of hospitalizations with laboratory-confirmed influenza. Seizures (n = 97) and encephalopathy (n = 44) were the most commonly identified influenza-associated neurologic complications, although an additional 20 hospitalizations had other influenza-associated neurologic complications. Hospitalizations with influenzaassociated neurologic complications were similar in age and influenza type (A/B) to those without. Children with a pre-existing neurologic diagnosis (n = 326) had a greater proportion of influenza-associated neurologic complications compared with those without (22.7% vs 6.4%, P < .001). Presence of a pre-existing neurologic diagnosis (aOR 4.6, P < .001), lack of seasonal influenza vaccination (aOR 1.6, P = .020), and age <= 5 years (aOR 1.6, P = .017) were independently associated with influenza-associated neurologic complications. Conclusions Influenza-associated neurologic complications are common in children hospitalized with influenza, particularly those with pre-existing neurologic diagnoses. A better understanding of the epidemiology and factors associated with influenza-associated neurologic complications will direct future investigation into potential neuropathologic mechanisms and mitigating strategies. Vaccination is recommended and may help prevent influenzaassociated neurologic complications in children.

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