| Literature DB >> 22452874 |
Matthias Nachtnebel1, Benedikt Greutelaers, Gerhard Falkenhorst, Pernille Jorgensen, Manuel Dehnert, Brunhilde Schweiger, Christian Träder, Silke Buda, Tim Eckmanns, Ole Wichmann, Wiebke Hellenbrand.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surveillance of severe acute respiratory infections (SARI) in sentinel hospitals is recommended to estimate the burden of severe influenza-cases. Therefore, we monitored patients admitted with respiratory infections (RI) in 9 Berlin hospitals from 7.12.2009 to 12.12.2010 according to different case definitions (CD) and determined the proportion of cases with influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 (pH1N1). We compared the sensitivity and specificity of CD for capturing pandemic pH1N1 cases.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22452874 PMCID: PMC3362781 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Flowchart of case definitions (CD) for hospitalized respiratory infections. To be included as a case in the hospital-based surveillance of acute respiratory infections in Berlin, 2009/10, patients had to fulfil criteria of the broadest case definition (CD1). All CD1 who did not meet the CD4 (SARI) criteria were classified as CD1b. CD2 and CD3 fulfilled clinical criteria only and excluded those where clinical criteria were not fully met but a physician's (suspected) diagnosis of RI in the chart led to inclusion. The smallest subsample of CD1 were cases fulfilling CD4 criteria (SARI as defined by ECDC/WHO).
Patients with respiratory infections according to case definition and pH1N1 status, demographic and clinical characteristics, hospital-based surveillance of acute respiratory infections, Berlin 2009/10
| Cases Definition (number of cases) | % male | Median age, females* | Median age, males | % requiring ICU treatment | % requiring mechanical ventilation | % pH1N1 positive among tested | Duration of hospital stay (median) | Case fatality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 61%* | 49 y | 51 y | 12% | 6% | 6% | 6 days | 4% | |
| 62%* | 50 y | 51 y | 11% | 5% | 4% | 6 days | 4% | |
| 57%* | 45 y | 50 y* | 14% | 7% | 7% | 7 days | 2% | |
| 65% | 42 y | 46 y | 20% | 7% | 100% | 6 days | 0% | |
* statistically significant (p < 0.05) when compared to female cases
See text and Figure 1 for explanation of CD1, 1b and 4
Absolute and relative number of patients tested positive for pH1N1 by case definition and study period, hospital-based surveillance of acute respiratory infections, Berlin, 2009/10
| No. tested for influenza (%) | No. testing positive for influenza* (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Period 1 | 60/110 (55%) | 16 (29%) | |
| Period 2 | 294/915 (32%) | 4 (1%) | |
| Total | 354/1,025 (35%) | 20 (6%) | |
| Period 1 | 32/71 (45%) | 7 (25%) | |
| Period 2 | 174/671 (26%) | 2 (1%) | |
| Total | 206/742 (28%) | 9 (5%) | |
| Period 1 | 28/39 (72%) | 9 (32%) | |
| Period 2 | 120/244 (49%) | 2 (2%) | |
| Total | 148/283 (52%) | 11 (8%) | |
*Patients with missing PCR results excluded
Figure 2Incidence of hospitalized respiratory infections fulfilling criteria for CD1b and CD4 as a percentage of internal medicine ward admissions in the study hospitals per calendar week. Weekly incidences are shown together with predicted incidences and 95%CI according to Poisson regression. All pH1N1 cases notified in Berlin through the national routine surveillance system, 2009-2010 are shown for comparison.
Figure 3Incidence of respiratory infections fulfilling criteria for CD1 admitted to intensive care units (ICU) as a percentage of all admissions to ICU per calendar week. Weekly incidences are shown together with predicted incidences and 95%CI according to Poisson regression. All pH1N1 cases notified in Berlin through the national routine surveillance system, 2009-2010 are shown for comparison.
Minimum and maximum weekly incidence of respiratory infections as a proportion of internal medicine admissions and intensive care unit (ICU) admissions, respectively, according to case definition (CD), hospital-based surveillance of acute respiratory infections, Berlin, 2009/10
| Case definition | Maximum | Week | Minimum | Week |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8.3% | 50/2009 | 2.0% | 27/2010 | |
| 5.6% | 41/2010 | 1.4% | 29/2010 | |
| 3.2% | 50/2009 | 0.2% | 25/2010 | |
| 10.0% | 51/2009 | 0% | repeatedly | |
See text and Figure 1 for explanation of CD1, 1b and 4
Comparison of case definitions (CD) for hospitalized respiratory infections (RI) according to their ability to capture pH1N1-positive cases
| Case definition | Cases from entire study period | Cases from study period 1 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Specificity | Area under ROC | Sensitivity | Specificity | Area under ROC | ||
| 55% | 0.57 | 56% | 0.59 | ||||
| 26% | 0.60 | 44% | |||||
| 90% | 41% | 94% | 44% | 0.69 | |||
| 55% | 0.56 | 56% | 0.57 | ||||
| 22% | 0.59 | 38% | |||||
| 90% | 35% | 94% | 41% | 0.68 | |||
Sensitivity, specificity, area under the receiver operator curve (ROC), percentage of pH1N1-positives captured for study period 1 (significant influenza virus circulation in Berlin) and the entire study period (gold standard: PCR confirmation of pH1N1 infections)
*Cases testing negative were only included as pH1N1-negative if the interval from symptom onset to swabbing was ≤ 4 days or ≤ 7 days, respectively. Highest ROC area in bold.
Figure 4Receiver Operator Curve (ROC) comparing the capability of different case definitions (CD) for hospitalized respiratory infections (RI) to capture cases of influenza A/H1N1 2009 (pH1N1). Areas under the ROC curve for CD2, CD3 and CD4 using pH1N1 PCR results as the gold standard for the overall study period (left) and the period with significant pH1N1 in Berlin (right). Data based on cases of respiratory infections hospitalized in the participating hospitals and tested for influenza, Berlin, December 2009 to December 2010. pH1N1 negative cases included only if period between symptom onset and nasopharyngeal swab ≤ 7 days.