| Literature DB >> 28928418 |
Samuel Cordey1,2, Diem-Lan Vu1,2, Marie-Celine Zanella1,2, Lara Turin1,2, Aline Mamin1,2, Laurent Kaiser1,2.
Abstract
Classical human astroviruses (HAstV) are the third most common cause of non-bacterial acute gastroenteritis. Due to the lack of routine molecular assays, novel HAstV are underdiagnosed and the magnitude of their contribution to clinical disease remains unknown. To better understand their prevalence and the susceptible patient profile, we conducted a comprehensive screening of novel and classical HAstV in stool and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples collected for clinical care in a tertiary care hospital using a specially designed rRT-PCR panel for the detection of novel (MLB1-3 and VA1-4) and classical HAstV. Of the 654 stool samples, 20 were positive for HAstV, and the novel (n=10; 3 MLB1, 4 MLB2; 3 VA2) and classical (n=10) serotypes were equally prevalent. None of the 105 CSF samples were positive. Investigating the patient profile, we found a higher prevalence (P=0.0002) of both novel and classical HAstV in pediatric stool samples (3.4% and 3%, respectively) compared with adult stool samples (0.5% and 0.7%, respectively). Furthermore, all novel and classical HAstV-positive pediatric subjects were ≤four years old, demonstrating similar susceptible populations. Forty-five percent of positive patients were immunocompromised (novel: 40%, classical: 50%). A comparison of novel and classical HAstV-positive cases showed a lower viral load for novel HAstV (P=0.0007) with significantly more upper respiratory symptoms (70% of subjects; P=0.02); this observation may suggest a unique pathogenic pathway. This study confirms the clinical and epidemiological relevance of novel HAstV and identifies a target population in which routine screening may yield clinically valuable information.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28928418 PMCID: PMC5625321 DOI: 10.1038/emi.2017.71
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Microbes Infect ISSN: 2222-1751 Impact factor: 7.163
Figure 1Study flowchart using eight rRT-PCRs to detect human astroviruses in stool and cerebrospinal (CSF) samples sent for viral screening in the laboratory of virology, University Hospitals of Geneva, 2015–2016.
Figure 2Positive human astroviruses in stool samples. Top: Pie chart showing the prevalence and composition of classical and novel astroviruses among HAstV-positive patients. Bottom: histogram of the temporal distribution of cases. human astrovirus, HAstV.
Clinical cases of classical and novel HAstV detection in stool samples
| 1 | M | 3.1 years | No | HAstV-MLB1 | 5.5 × E4 | Neg. | No | Yes, 2 days | Vomiting, diarrhea | Yes, 15 days | Cough | |
| 2 | F | 3.4 years | No | HAstV-MLB1 | 6.1 × E3 | Neg. | Yes | Yes, 4 days | Diarrhea, abdominal pain | No | ||
| 3 | F | 51.0 years | Yes, liver transplant recipient | 26.4 months | HAstV-MLB1 | 3.3 × E2 | Rotavirus | No | Yes, 1 day | Vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain | Yes, 1 day | Cough |
| 4 | M | 4.2 years | Yes, liver transplant recipient | 37.5 months | HAstV-MLB2 | 7.1 × E2 | Neg. | No | Yes, 1 day | Diarrhea | Yes, 13 days | Cough, rhinorrhea |
| 5 | F | 9.8 months | No | HAstV-MLB2 | 2.9 × E6 | Neg. | No | Yes, 14 days | Diarrhea | Yes | Cough | |
| 6 | M | 2.4 years | Yes, liver transplant recipient | 15.4 months | HAstV-MLB2 | 7.2 × E3 | Neg. | No | Yes, 21 days | Diarrhea | Yes, 10 days | Odynophagia |
| 7 | M | 38.2 years | Yes, allogeneic stem cell transplant recipient | 4.7 months | HAstV-MLB2 | 3.3 × E9 | Neg. | No | Yes, 3 days | Vomiting | No | |
| 8 | F | 1.4 months | No | HAstV-VA2 | 4.8 × E2 | Neg. | Yes | Yes, 4 days | Diarrhea | Yes, 10 days | Rhinorrhea | |
| 9 | F | 23 days | No | HAstV-VA2 | 8.4 × E2 | Enterovirus | Yes | Yes, 2 days | Diarrhea | No | ||
| 10 | M | 5.1 months | No | HAstV-VA2 | 3.4 × E2 | Neg. | No | Yes, 1 day | Diarrhea | Yes, 16 days | Cough, rhinorrhea | |
| 11 | F | 9.6 months | Yes, liver transplant recipient | 6 days | Classical HAstV undet. | 2.3 × E7 | Neg. | Yes | Yes, 1 day | Diarrhea | No | |
| 12 | M | 4.2 years | No | Classical HAstV-8 | 2.0 × E10 | Enterovirus | Yes | Yes, 2 days | Diarrhea | No | ||
| 13 | M | 4.8 years | Yes, kidney transplant recipient | 37.9 months | Classical HAstV undet. | 2.1 × E5 | Neg. | No | Yes, 4 days | Diarrhea | Yes, 7 days | Cough |
| 14 | M | 1.4 years | No | Classical HAstV-1 | 2.4 × E10 | Neg. | No | Yes, >30 days | Diarrhea | No | ||
| 15 | F | 9.9 months | No | Classical HAstV-2 | 1.0 × E11 | Neg. | No | Yes, 1 day | Vomiting, diarrhea | No | ||
| 16 | F | 6.4 months | No | Classical HAstV-1 | 5.3 × E6 | Neg. | Yes | Yes, 14 days | Vomiting, diarrhea | No | ||
| 17 | F | 3.4 years | Yes, liver transplant recipient | 20.6 months | Classical HAstV-4 | 1.6 × E9 | Neg. | Yes | Yes, 2 days | Vomiting, diarrohea | No | |
| 18 | M | 40.2 years | Yes, allogeneic stem cell transplant recipient | 25.4 months | Classical HAstV-1 | 7.5 × E9 | Neg. | No | Yes, 5 days | Diarrhea | No | |
| 19 | F | 30.4 years | No | Classical HAstV-3 | 2.0 × E10 | Neg. | No | Yes, 1 day | Vomiting, diarrhea | No | ||
| 20 | F | 53.0 years | Yes, allogeneic stem cell transplant recipient | 11.3 months | Classical HAstV-5 | 6.0 × E11 | Neg. | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Abbreviations: human astrovirus, HAstV; not available, NA; negative, neg; undetermined, undet.
Figure 3Classical and novel human astrovirus viral load in stool samples. The horizontal lines denote median log values. ***P<0.001. human astrovirus, HAstV.
HAstV-positive stool samples: overall and stratified (classical and novel) HAstV patient characteristics
| Male sex – no. (%) | 9 (45) | 4 (40) | 5 (50) | |
| Age of pediatric and adult patients (yo) | 0.3258 | |||
| Median (range) | 3.3 (0.06–53.0) | 3.8 (0.5–53.0) | 2.8 (0.06–51.0) | |
| Mean±sd | 12.2±18.6 | 14.0±19.6 | 10.4±18.4 | |
| Pediatric patients, no. (%) | 15 (75) | 7 (70) | 8 (80) | 1.000 |
| Age of pediatric patients, months | 0.3545 | |||
| Median (range) | 16.7 (0.8–57.7) | 16.7 (6.4–57.7) | 19.2 (0.8–50.0) | |
| Mean±sd | 24.4±20.1 | 27.3±21.6 | 21.8±19.8 | |
| Immunocompromised – no. (%) | 9 (45) | 5 (50) | 4 (40) | 1.000 |
| Fever – no. (%) | 7 (36.8) | 4 (44.4) | 3 (30) | |
| With respiratory symptoms – no. (%) | 8 (42.1) | 1 (11.1) | 7 (70) | 0.020 |
| Time interval between respiratory symptoms and HAstV detection (days) | ||||
| Median (range) | 11.5 (1–20) | 7 | 13 (1–20) | |
| Mean±sd | 11.5±5.9 | 7 | 12.1±6.0 | |
| Time interval between transplantation and HAstV detection (days) | ||||
| Median (range) | 617 (6–1139) | 617 (6–1139) | 626.5 (142–1126) | |
| Mean±sd | 598.1±399.9 | 572.4±428.3 | 630.3±423.6 | |
| Viral load (RNA copies/mL of resuspended stool) | 0.0007 | |||
| Median (range) | 4.1 × E6 (3.4 × E2–6.0 × E11) | 1.4 × E10 (2.1 × E5–6.0 × E11) | 3.5 × E3 (3.4 × E2–3.3 × E9) | |
| Mean±sd | 3.9 × E10±1.3E × 11 | 7.7 × E10±1.9 × E11 | 3.3 × E8±1.0 × E9 | |
Abbreviations: human astrovirus, HAstV; standard deviation, sd; years old, yo.
P-values are for the comparison between the classical and novel HAstV-positive stool sample groups.
Percentage calculated based on 19 patients (1 missing data, Table 1).
Percentage calculated based on 9 patients (1 missing data, Table 1).