| Literature DB >> 33532889 |
Renato Gualtieri1,2, Gabriel Bronz1,2, Mario G Bianchetti1,2, Sebastiano A G Lava3, Elena Giuliano1,2, Gregorio P Milani4,5,6, Luca M M Jermini1,2.
Abstract
Group A Streptococcus has been associated with a perianal infection. We conducted a systematic review of the literature on childhood streptococcal perianitis in three databases: Excerpta Medica, National Library of Medicine, and Web of Science. The main purposes were to document the clinical features, the tendency to recur, the association with an asymptomatic streptococcal throat carriage, the accuracy of rapid streptococcal tests, and the mechanism possibly underlying the acquisition of this infection. More than 80% of cases are boys ≤7.0 years of age with defecation disorders, perianal pain, local itch, rectal bleeding, or fissure and a sharply demarcated perianal redness. Perianitis is associated with a streptococcal tonsillopharyngitis in about every fifth case. The time to diagnosis is ≥3 weeks in 65% of cases. Recurrences occur within 3½ months in about 20% of cases. An asymptomatic group A streptococcal throat carriage occurs in 63% of cases. As compared with perianal Streptococcus A culture, the rapid streptococcal tests have a positive predictive value of 80% and a negative predictive value of 96%. It is hypothesized that digital inoculation from nasopharynx to anus underlies perianitis. Many cases are likely caused directly by children, who are throat and nasal carriers of Streptococcus A. Some cases might occur in children, who have their bottoms wiped by caregivers with streptococcal tonsillopharyngitis or carriage of Streptococcus.Entities:
Keywords: Anal dermatitis; Childhood; Perianal cellulitis; Perianitis; Streptococcus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33532889 PMCID: PMC8105195 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-021-03965-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Fig. 1Perianal streptococcal disease in childhood. Flowchart of the literature search process
Demographics, history, and clinical features in 147 children 0.1 to 13 years of age affected by streptococcal perianitis. Continuous data are presented as median and interquartile range, categorical data as frequency and percentage
| Demographics | |
| Gender (males : female) | 119 (81%) : 28 (19%) |
| Age | |
| Years | 4.0 [3.0–5.1] |
| ≤1.0 years | 15 (10%) |
| 1.1–7.0 years | 118 (80%) |
| ≥7.1 years | 14 (9.5%) |
| Time to diagnosis | |
| Weeks | 5 [1–6] |
| ≤2 weeks | 51 (35%) |
| 3–5 weeks | 49 (34%) |
| ≥6–10 weeks | 46 (31%) |
| Presenting symptoms | |
| Perianal pain | 68 (46%) |
| Anal itch | 67 (45%) |
| Defecation disorders* | 58 (39%) |
| Rectal bleeding | 27 (18%) |
| Anal fissure | 23 (15%) |
| Discharge | 16 (10%) |
| Fever | 7 (4.7%) |
| Extended skin involvement | |
| Genital❖ | 16 (11%) |
| Impetigo | 3 (2%) |
| Scarlatiniform rash | 1 (0.6%) |
| Immunologically mediated sequelae | |
| Psoriasis◆ | 16 (11%) |
| Poststreptococcal myalgia | 1 (0.6%) |
| Further sequelae | 0 (0.0%) |
*Painful defecation (N = 44), constipation (N = 10), or fecal incontinence (N = 4)
❖Balanitis (N = 13), vulvovaginitis (N = 3)
◆Guttate psoriasis (N = 15), plaque psoriasis (N = 1)
Rate (cases per 10,000 patient encounters) of perianal streptococcal disease in general pediatric practice reported in the literature
| Author | Country | Period | Cases | Cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amren [ | USA | May 1964–Jul. 1965 | 10 | 4.6 |
| Kokx [ | USA | Oct. 1985–Jun. 1986 | 31 | 46 |
| Combs [ | USA | Jan. 1990–Mar. 1990 | 2 | 16 |
| Mogielnicki [ | USA | Jan. 1997–Dec. 1997 | 23 | 50 |
| Clegg [ | USA | Jul. 1999–Jun. 2002 | 56 | 4.4 |
| Clegg [ | USA | Jan. 2007–Dec. 2012 | 101 | 4.8 |
| Martínez Blanco [ | Sain | Apr. 2011–Mar. 2019 | 95 | 33 |
Fig. 2Familial cases of perianal streptococcal disease. Female (circle) and male (square) subjects are given different symbols
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