| Literature DB >> 24901443 |
P K Munywoki1, D C Koech1, C N Agoti1, N Kibirige1, J Kipkoech1, P A Cane2, G F Medley3, D J Nokes1.
Abstract
RSV is the most important viral cause of pneumonia and bronchiolitis in children worldwide and has been associated with significant disease burden. With the renewed interest in RSV vaccines, we provide realistic estimates on duration, and influencing factors on RSV shedding which are required to better understand the impact of vaccination on the virus transmission dynamics. The data arise from a prospective study of 47 households (493 individuals) in rural Kenya, followed through a 6-month period of an RSV seasonal outbreak. Deep nasopharyngeal swabs were collected twice each week from all household members, irrespective of symptoms, and tested for RSV by multiplex PCR. The RSV G gene was sequenced. A total of 205 RSV infection episodes were detected in 179 individuals from 40 different households. The infection data were interval censored and assuming a random event time between observations, the average duration of virus shedding was 11·2 (95% confidence interval 10·1-12·3) days. The shedding durations were longer than previous estimates (3·9-7·4 days) based on immunofluorescence antigen detection or viral culture, and were shown to be strongly associated with age, severity of infection, and revealed potential interaction with other respiratory viruses. These findings are key to our understanding of the spread of this important virus and are relevant in the design of control programmes.Entities:
Keywords: transmission dynamics
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24901443 PMCID: PMC4411640 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268814001393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Baseline characteristics of the 179 study participants and the associated RSV infection episodes
| Covariates | Categories | Persons | Episodes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % | ||
| Age in years, at start of sampling | |||||
| <1 yr | 55 | 11·2 | 37 | 18·1 | |
| 1–<5 yr | 82 | 16·6 | 49 | 23·9 | |
| 5–<15 yr | 165 | 33·5 | 74 | 36·1 | |
| 15–<40 yr | 147 | 29·8 | 36 | 17·6 | |
| ⩾40 yr | 44 | 8·9 | 9 | 4·4 | |
| Relations | Study infant | 47 | 9·5 | 34 | 16·6 |
| Sibling | 164 | 33·3 | 79 | 38·5 | |
| Cousin | 124 | 25·2 | 55 | 26·8 | |
| Mother | 46 | 9·3 | 14 | 6·8 | |
| Father | 33 | 6·7 | 6 | 2·9 | |
| Other | 79 | 16·0 | 17 | 8·3 | |
| Gender | Female | 272 | 55·2 | 116 | 56·6 |
| Male | 221 | 44·8 | 89 | 43·4 | |
| RSV subtype | Group A | — | — | 81 | 39·5 |
| Group B | — | — | 110 | 53·7 | |
| Groups A and B | — | — | 14 | 6·8 | |
| Order of infection | First | — | — | 179 | 87·3 |
| Second | — | — | 26 | 12·7 | |
| Symptomatic, i.e. with ARI | No | — | — | 87 | 42·4 |
| Yes | — | — | 118 | 57·6 | |
| Presence of co-infection | No | — | — | 119 | 58·1 |
| Yes | — | — | 86 | 42·0 | |
| During household outbreak | No | — | — | 42 | 20·5 |
| Yes | — | — | 163 | 79·5 | |
| Outcome | |||||
| Duration | <7 days | — | — | 74 | 36·1 |
| 7–<14 days | — | — | 75 | 36·6 | |
| 15–<21 days | — | — | 32 | 15·6 | |
| ⩾21 days | — | — | 24 | 11·7 | |
RSV, Respiratory syncytial virus; ARI, acute respiratory illness.
Number of individuals in the parent study.
RSV infection episodes.
The relationship of household members with the study infant.
Duration of RSV shedding episodes.
Fig. 1.Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) group A (a) and group B (b) episodes ordered by age at infection. RSV-positive samples are marked by a blue ‘ × ’ while the red line links PCR-positive samples from the same infection episode.
Fig. 2.Infection episodes for 17 individuals with suspected repeat infection with the same respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) group showing RSV G gene variability. Green solid circles indicate samples were collected but RSV negative; red crosses (×) indicate RSV-positive samples but not sequenced; solid red or blue circles show RSV-positive samples successfully sequenced. If red is in both episodes then the variants in each episode were identical and if one episode is red and the other blue then they were non-identical. Open pink diamonds (◇) represent detection of other viruses; open black circles (○) show when the individual had respiratory symptoms. Age (in years) at the start of the first episode is in blue, with the corresponding interval between episodes (in days) in grey. ID, Unique identifier of the individual.
Fig. 3.Kaplan–Meier plots showing the (a) minimum, (b) midpoint and (c) maximum estimates of median duration of respiratory syncytial virus shedding. IQR, Interquartile range.
Sampling intervals, age at infection and estimated shedding duration by the censoring type
| Characteristic | All | Fullyb
( | Leftc
( | Rightd
( | Bothe
( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sampling intervalsf | Mean | 95% CI | Mean | 95% CI | Mean | 95% CI | Mean | 95% CI | Mean | 95% CI |
| Before | 4·2 | 3·8–4·5 | 3·7 | 3·6–3·9 | 9·6 | 8·6–10·5 | 3·4 | 2·8–4·0 | 18·50 | — |
| During | 3·5 | 3·4–3·6 | 3·5 | 3·4–3·6 | 3·8 | 2·8–4·9 | 4·1 | 3·1–5·0 | — | — |
| After | 5·2 | 4·2–6·3 | 3·7 | 3·5–3·8 | 3·4 | 2·4–4·3 | 24·1 | 13·3–34·9 | 11·0 | — |
| Age, yearsg | 11·1 | 9·3–13·0 | 10·4 | 8·6–12·3 | 15·1 | 5·0–25·1 | 15·6 | 6·5–24·6 | 16·9 | — |
| Shedding durationh | 10·6 | 9·6–11·7 | 10·9 | 9·7–12·1 | 7·4 | 4·5–10·2 | 8·9 | 6·7–11·0 | 14·8 | — |
CI, Confidence interval; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.
All RSV infection episodes; b fully observed episodes; c left-censored episodes only; d right-censored episodes only; e episodes with both left and right censoring; f intervals between nasopharyngeal swab collection before, during, and after the RSV infection episode in days; g age (in years) at the start of the episode; h shedding duration (in days) based on the midpoint estimation.
Fig. 4.Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) shedding in episodes associated with co-detection of RSV groups A and B. The solid red circle (●) and blue marker (×) represents RSV groups A and B, respectively. The red line links PCR-positive samples denoting the RSV episode.
Final multivariate Cox regression model : factors influencing the rates of recovery from RSV infection in rural Kenya
| Factors | Categories | Reference | HR | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group, years | |||||
| 1–4 yr | <1 year | 1·98 | 1·30–3·02 | 0·002 | |
| 5–14 yr | 1·82 | 1·16–2·87 | 0·01 | ||
| ⩾15 yr | 1·97 | 1·11–3·51 | 0·021 | ||
| Symptomatic | Asymptomatic | 0·56 | 0·40–0·79 | 0·001 | |
| Detection of other | Before | No other viruses | 1·56 | 1·02–2·39 | 0·041 |
| During | 0·48 | 0·32–0·73 | <0·001 | ||
| Other household members infected (%) | ⩾33%–66% | <33% | 0·59 | 0·40–0·87 | 0·008 |
| >66% | 0·51 | 0·35–0·74 | <0·001 | ||
| RSV group B | A | 1·07 | 0·83–1·39 | 0·588 | |
| Male gender | Female | 0·97 | 0·77–1·23 | 0·804 | |
| Second RSV episode | First | 0·91 | 0·53–1·56 | 0·73 | |
RSV, Respiratory syncytial virus; HR, hazard ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Left-censored episodes excluded.
Other viruses were adenoviruses, rhinoviruses and coronaviruses.
Detection of other respiratory viruses during the 14 days prior to the start of RSV episode only.