| Literature DB >> 31189470 |
Maria Cleonice A Justino1, Erika A Campos2, Joana D'arc P Mascarenhas2, Luana S Soares2, Sylvia de Fátima S Guerra2, Ismari P Furlaneto3, Manoel Jaime C Pavão3, Tassio S Maciel3, Fredison P Farias3, Orvácio M Bezerra3, Caio Breno G Vinente2, Rodrigo José S Barros2, Alexandre C Linhares2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rotavirus antigenemia and RNAemia (the presence of rotavirus RNA in serum) have been commonly identified among paediatric patients with acute gastroenteritis. In this study we examined the association between rotavirus antigenemia and clinical features, and sought to determine the genotypes of rotaviruses detected in paired stool and serum samples.Entities:
Keywords: Antigenemia; Gastroenteritis; Hospitalisation; RNAemia; Rotavirus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31189470 PMCID: PMC6560848 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-019-1535-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Fig. 1Study profile summarising laboratory tests (ELISA and RT-PCR) performed with faeces and/or serum samples from 451 (of 556) children in Belém, Brazil
Comparison of clinical characteristics and vaccination status between rotavirus-related acute gastroenteritis cases with and without rotavirus antigen in serum samples
| Characteristics [N*] | Children with rotavirus-positive stools (N = 109) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotavirus-positive in paired sera | Rotavirus-negative in paired sera | ||||
| N (%) | 95% CI | N (%) | 95% CI | ||
| Ruuska & Vesikari score†‡ [105] | |||||
| ≥11 (severe) | 13 (30.9) | 19.1-46.0 | 29 (46.0) | 34.3-58.2 | 0.1557 |
| ≥15 (very severe) | 29 (69.1) | 53.9-80.9 | 34 (54.0) | 41.8-65.7 | |
| Axillary temperature (°C)£ [107] | |||||
| <37.5 | 11 (26.2) | 15.3-41.1 | 18 (27.7) | 18.3-39.6 | 1.0000 |
| ≥37.5 | 31 (73.8) | 15.3-41.1 | 47 (72.3) | 60.4-81.7 | |
| Episodes of vomiting/24h [109] | |||||
| ≤3 | 7 (16.7) | 8.3-30.6 | 30 (44.8) | 33.5-56.6 | 0.0035 |
| >3 | 35 (83.3) | 69.4-91.7 | 37 (55.2) | 44.4-66.5 | |
| Duration of vomiting (days) [109] | |||||
| ≤3 | 34 (80.9) | 66.7-90.0 | 55 (82.1) | 71.3-89.5 | 1.0000 |
| >3 | 08 (19.1) | 9.9-33.3 | 12 (17.9) | 10.6-28.8 | |
| Episodes of diarrhoea/24h§ [108] | |||||
| ≤3 | 5 (11.9) | 5.2-25.0 | 13 (19.7) | 11.9-30.8 | 0.4277 |
| >3 | 37 (88.1) | 75.0-94.8 | 53 (80.3) | 69.2-88.1 | |
| Duration of diarrhoea (days) [109] | |||||
| ≤3 | 31 (73.8) | 58.9-84.7 | 47 (70.0) | 58.3-79.8 | 0.8278 |
| >3 | 11 (26.2) | 15.3-41.1 | 20 (30.0) | 20.2-41.7 | |
| Leucocytes/ mm3|| [108] | |||||
| ≤10.000 | 31 (73.8) | 58.9-84.7 | 56 (84.8) | 74.3-91.6 | 0.2126 |
| >10.000 | 11 (26.2) | 15.3-41.1 | 10 (15.2) | 8.4-25.7 | |
| Rotavirus vaccination¶ [85] | |||||
| Unvaccinated | 8 (25.8) | 13.7-43.3 | 3 (5.6) | 1.9-15.1 | 0.0151 |
| At least one dose | 23 (74.2) | 56.8-86.3 | 51 (94.4) | 84.9-98.1 | |
*Number of patients with available data for evaluation
**Fisher test
20 points Ruuska & Vesikari score (1990)
Not available for 2 patients; moderate score for 2 patients, not included
£ Not available for 2 patients
Not available for 1 patient
Not available for 1 patient
Vaccination status not available for 24 patients
Fig. 2Annual distribution of rotavirus genotypes identified in faecal samples from 109 children with gastroenteritis in Belém, Brazil
Distribution of rotavirus genotypes in paired stool and serum samples obtained from 10 individual patients hospitalised for gastroenteritis in Belém, Brazil
| Patient identification | Electropherotypes in stool samples | Rotavirus G and P genotypes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stool samples | Serum samples | ||
| PID 34 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[4] |
| PID 37 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[4] |
| PID 39 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[4] |
| PID 40 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[4] |
| PID 79 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[4] |
| PID 87 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[4] |
| PID 93 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[4] |
| PID 353 | Short | G2P[4] | G2P[NT] |
| PID 445 | Long | G12P[8] | G2P[NT] |
| PID 446 | Long | G12P[8] | G2P[NT] |
NT Not typed
Fig. 3Phylogenetic dendogram of partial VP7 gene of G2P [4] and G12P [8] strains from stool and serum samples (highlighted in bold) during June 2012–June 2015 in Belém, Brazil. Bootstrap values (2000 replicates) are shown at the branch nodes; values < 70% are not shown. Strains detected in serum samples are indicated with empty triangles while strains detected in stool samples are indicated with black circles
Fig. 4Correlation between stool viral load as determined by PCR cycle Ct values, and the rotavirus antigen levels in serum samples from 96 children with gastroenteritis in Belém, Brazil, as assayed by ELISA