| Literature DB >> 33977890 |
Suma Uday1, Deepthi Jyothish2, Angeline Darren2, Meissa Osman2, Kavitha Masilamani2, Syed Habib Ali2, Hari Krishnan Kanthimathinathan3, Ashish Chikermane4, Eslam Al-Abadi5, Steven B Welch6, Scott Hackett6, Barnaby R Scholefield7.
Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has caused mild illness in children, until the emergence of the novel hyperinflammatory condition paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome temporally associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) (PIMS-TS). PIMS-TS is thought to be a post-SARS-CoV-2 immune dysregulation with excessive inflammatory cytokine release. We studied 25 hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) concentrations in children with PIMS-TS, admitted to a tertiary paediatric hospital in the UK, due to its postulated role in cytokine regulation and immune response. Eighteen children (median (range) age 8·9 (0·3-14·6) years, male = 10) met the case definition. The majority were of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) origin (89 %, 16/18). Positive SARS-CoV-2 IgG antibodies were present in 94 % (17/18) and RNA by PCR in 6 % (1/18). Seventy-eight percentage of the cohort were vitamin D deficient (< 30 nmol/l). The mean 25OHD concentration was significantly lower when compared with the population mean from the 2015/16 National Diet and Nutrition Survey (children aged 4-10 years) (24 v. 54 nmol/l (95 % CI -38·6, -19·7); P < 0·001). The paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) group had lower mean 25OHD concentrations compared with the non-PICU group, but this was not statistically significant (19·5 v. 31·9 nmol/l; P = 0·11). The higher susceptibility of BAME children to PIMS-TS and also vitamin D deficiency merits contemplation. Whilst any link between vitamin D deficiency and the severity of COVID-19 and related conditions including PIMS-TS requires further evidence, public health measures to improve vitamin D status of the UK BAME population have been long overdue.Entities:
Keywords: Coronavirus disease 2019; Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children; Paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome temporally associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; Paediatric intensive care unit; Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; Vitamin D deficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33977890 PMCID: PMC8245338 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114521001562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718
Case definitions of Paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome as per RCPCH, CDC and WHO.
| RCPCH case definition (3) |
| 1. A child or young person presenting with fever, evidence of inflammation (neutrophilia, elevated CRP and lymphopenia) with evidence of single or multi-organ failure (shock, cardiac, respiratory, renal, gastrointestinal or neurological disorder) with additional features that may include full or partial criteria for Kawasaki’s disease AND |
| 2. Exclusion of any other microbial cause, including bacterial sepsis, staphylococcal or streptococcal shock syndromes, infections associated with myocarditis such as enterovirus AND |
| 3. SARS-CoV-2-PCR testing may be positive or negative. |
| CDC case definition (4) |
| 1. An individual aged <21 years presenting with fever, laboratory evidence of inflammation and evidence of clinically severe illness requiring hospitalisation, with multisystem ( |
| 2. No plausible alternative diagnosis AND |
| 3. Positive for current or recent SARS-Cov-2 infection by RT-PCR, serology or antigen test, or COVID-19 exposure within the 4 weeks prior to the onset of symptoms. |
| WHO case definition (11) |
| 1. Children and adolescents 0–19 years of age with fever |
| 2. Elevated markers of inflammation such as ESR, C-reactive protein or procalcitonin AND |
| 3. No other obvious microbial cause of inflammation, including bacterial sepsis, staphylococcal or streptococcal shock syndromes AND |
| 4. Evidence of COVID-19 (RT-PCR, antigen or serology positive), or likely contact with patients with COVID-19. |
Baseline characteristics, investigations and treatment of children presenting with paediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome temporally associated with multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (PIMS-TS)
| Decimal age (years) | Sex | Ethnicity | BMI | Centile | Respiratory support IV | Treatment IVIG | LVEF | Laboratory results (reference values, where applicable, are provided in the footnote) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F = female; M = Male | Sars-Cov-2 | 25OHD | Bone profile | Inflammatory markers | Hb | |||||||
| PICU | ||||||||||||
| 14·5 | F | Black Caribbean | 18 | 25th–50th) | O2 | IVIG, MP | 43 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 19 | Adj Ca 2·33 PO4 0·99 | CRP 252 ESR 90 | 79 |
| 9·6 | M | Asian | 20 | 91st–98th | HFNC, 02 | IVIG, MP | 50 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 8 | Adj Ca N/A | CRP 208 ESR 33 | 68 |
| 8·8 | F | Black/African Caribbean | 22 | 98th–99 | HFNC, 02 | IVIG, MP | 32 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 7 | Adj Ca 2·40 PO4 1·67 ALP 70 (80–330) | CRP 422 ESR 90 | 84 |
| 12·6 | F | Black/African Caribbean | 15 | 2nd–9th | None | IVIG | 42 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 17 | Adj Ca 2·25 PO4 1·08 | CRP 128 ESR N/A | 94 |
| 12·7 | M | Mixed White/African | 19 | 75th–91st | O2 | IVIG | 38 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 18 | Adj Ca 2·24 PO4 0·95 ALP 76(90–290) | CRP 86 ESR 30 | 104 |
| 5·3 | M | Mixed | 17 | 91st–98th | IV, 02 | IVIG | 50 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 16 | Adj Ca 2·32 PO4 1·44 ALP 69 (80–330) | CRP 101 ESR 105 | 67 |
| 10·7 | F | Black/African Caribbean | 32 | > 99·6th | IV, NIV, 02 | IVIG, MP, Tocilizumab | 25 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 21 | Adj Ca 2·54 PO4 1·34 ALP 79 (80–310) | CRP 480 ESR 170 | 83 |
| 8 | F | Black/African Caribbean | 19 | 91st–98th | IV | IVIG, MP, Infliximab | 48 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 30 | Adj Ca 2·37 PO4 1·06 ALP 95 (80–330) | CRP 321 ESR 42 | 75 |
| 8 | F | Black/African Caribbean | 14 | 9th–25th | None | IVIG, MP | 50 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 27 | Adj Ca 2·48 PO4 1·05 ALP 120(80–330) | CRP 48 ESR > 170 | 88 |
| 7·1 | M | Black/African Caribbean | 23 | 98th–99 | HFNC, O2 | IVIG, Prednisolone | 42 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 20 | Adj Ca 2·30 PO4 0·8 ALP 102 (80–330) | CRP 264 ESR 12 | 93 |
| 8·0 | M | Asian | 14 | 9th–25th | HFNC | None | 28 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 38 | Adj Ca 2·40 PO4 1·17 ALP 59 (80–330) | CRP 244 ESR 45 | 79 |
| 7·0 | M | Asian | 13 | 2nd–9th | IV, HFNC | None | 49 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 13 | Adj Ca 2·37 PO4 1·77 ALP 95(80–330) | CRP 164 ESR 54 | 84 |
| Non PICU | ||||||||||||
| 13·5 | F | Any other White/Romanian | 25 | 91st–98th | None | IVIG, MP | > 55 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 12 | Adj Ca 2·39 PO4 1·17 ALP 93 (65–240) | CRP 128 ESR 70 | 83 |
| 7·7 | M | Asian | 20 | 98th–99 | None | IVIG, MP | > 55 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 14 | Adj Ca 2·25 PO4 0·98 ALP 107(80–330) | CRP 138 ESR 115 | 93 |
| 9·7 | M | Mixed- White/African | 17 | 91st–98th | None | IVIG | > 55 % | PCR +ve IgG +ve | 32 | Adj Ca 2·33 PO4 1·19 ALP 91 (80–330) | CRP 42 ESR 75 | 76 |
| 0·6 | F | White | Not available | None | IVIG | > 55 % | PCR –ve IgG –ve | 55 | Adj Ca 2·74 PO4 1·77 ALP 148 (80–330) | CRP 92 ESR 82 | 89 | |
| 13·2 | M | White | 27 | 98th–99 | None | None | > 55 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 65 | Adj Ca 2·48 PO4 1·72 ALP 106 (90–290) | CRP 152 ESR 60 | 136 |
| 0·29 | M | Black/African Caribbean | Not available | None | None | > 55 % | PCR –ve IgG +ve | 10 | Adj Ca 2·48 PO4 1·29 ALP 403 (80–330) | CRP 58 ESR 5 | 82 | |
PICU, paediatric intensive care unit; 25OHD, 25 hydroxyvitamin D; CRP, C-reactive protein; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction.
BMI centile, RCPCH chart (< 2nd centile low BMI, > 91st overweight, > 98th obese, > 99·6th severely obese).
Invasive ventilation.
Non-invasive ventilation.
High flow nasal cannula oxygen.
Supplemental oxygen.
Intravenous Ig.
Methylprednisolone.
Left ventricular ejection fraction (mild impairment 45–54 %, moderate 30–44 % and severe < 30 %).
25-hydroxyvitamin D (deficiency < 30 nmol/l, insufficiency 30–50 nmol/l, sufficiency > 50 nmol/l).
Adjusted Ca (normal range 2·20–2·70 mmol/l), phosphate 1·30–2·40 mmol/l, alkaline phosphatase (age- and sex-specific ranges provided in the table).
C-reactive protein (normal range 0–10 mg/l), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (normal range 0–9 mm/h).
Hb (reference range: 3 months–4 years: 110–140 g/l, 5–12 years: 115–140 g/l).
Not available.
Investigations and management of PICU group v. non-PICU group
| PICU | Non-PICU | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % | |
| 25OHD | ||||
| Median | 18·2 | 23·5 | ||
| Range | 7·8–38 | 10·6–65 | ||
| CRP | ||||
| Median | 226 | 110 | ||
| Range | 48–480 | 42–152 | ||
| ESR | ||||
| Median | 54 | 67·8 | ||
| Range | 12–170 | 5–115 | ||
| Inotropes/vasopressors | 12 | 100 | 0 | 0 |
| Invasive ventilation | 4 | 33 | 0 | 0 |
| Hemofiltration | 1 | 8 | 0 | 0 |
| LVEF | 0 | 0 | 3 | 50 |
| LVEF mild impairment | 4 | 34 | 3 | 50 |
| LVEF moderate impairment | 6 | 50 | 0 | |
| LVEF severe impairment | 2 | 16 | 0 | |
PICU, paediatric intensive care unit; 25OHD, 25 hydroxyvitamin D; CRP, C-reactive protein; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction.
25-hydroxyvitamin D (deficiency < 30nmol/l, insufficiency 30–50 nmol/l, sufficiency > 50 nmol/l).
C-reactive protein (normal range 0–10 mg/l).
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (normal range 0–9 mm/h).
Left ventricular ejection fraction (mild impairment 45–54 %, moderate 30–44 % and severe < 30 %).
Fig. 1.25 hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) concentrations in paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) and non-PICU groups (P = 0·11).