Literature DB >> 35333818

Features of COVID-19 in Children During the Omicron Wave Compared With Previous Waves in Madrid, Spain.

Alfredo Tagarro1, Olga-Nerea Coya2, Ana Pérez-Villena3, Beatriz Iglesias3, Adriana Navas4, David Aguilera-Alonso5, Cinta Moraleda6.   

Abstract

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35333818      PMCID: PMC8997014          DOI: 10.1097/INF.0000000000003482

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Infect Dis J        ISSN: 0891-3668            Impact factor:   3.806


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To the Editors:

The SARS-CoV-2 variant Omicron (B.1.1.529) replaced other variants in Spain during the sixth wave, accounting for 79%–94% of positive samples in the last 2 weeks of 2021.[1] The information is scarce about Omicron severity in children. To describe the features of children with COVID-19 during the Omicron wave, we reviewed charts from children with COVID-19 attended at the emergency room of a secondary center in Spain from December 20, 2021, to January 2, 2022. All patients’ charts were reviewed 1 week after diagnosis to check complications. The detection by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) used as target genes ORF1ab and N of the SARS-CoV-2 genome. All samples with a cycle threshold (Ct) <25 were analyzed with a second RT-PCR with probes targeting the gen S mutations consistent with Omicron. This study is part of the study EPICO-AEP.[2] A total of 1,360 children were attended at the emergency room during the study period. Globally, 94 (6.9%) had a positive RT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2, with a median age of 6.5 years (interquartile range: 1.3–9.7), and 82.9% had fever. Of them, 15 (16.0%) had a Ct <25: 13/15 (86.7%) were identified as Omicron and 2/15 (13.3%) as Delta variant. Only 2 of 94 (2.1%) patients were hospitalized: a 3-year-old girl with features of bacterial pneumonia and confirmed Omicron variant, and a 40-day-old infant with whooping cough. No patient needed pediatric intensive care unit admission or died. In a study performed by our group during the third wave, caused predominantly by the Alpha variant, 3/75 (4.0%) children with COVID-19 were hospitalized, not differently to the Omicron wave (P = 0.394), and one child needed pediatric intensive care unit admission. To better describe the profile of children with Omicron, we identified 17 further children with Omicron attended at another center. We compared the features of the 109 ambulatory children attended during the Omicron wave in these 2 centers to 546 ambulatory children attended in previous waves in 35 centers, from March 2020 to October 2021, included in the national COVID-19 EPICO-AEP registry (Table 1).[2] During the Omicron wave, more children presented upper respiratory tract infection, but fewer children had pneumonia. Fever, headache, and diarrhea were more common during the Omicron wave.
TABLE 1.

Comparison Between Features of Ambulatory Children Attended During the Omicron Wave and Previous Waves at the Emergency Rooms

FeaturesPrevious Waves N = 546 (%)Omicron Wave N = 109 (%) P
Sex (female)289 (52.9%)60 (55.0%)0.686
Age (yrs), median (IQR)5.7 (1.1–11.7)6.6 (1.3–9.8)0.330
Age band (yrs) <0.001
 0–4259 (47.4%)47 (43.1%)
 5–12162 (29.7%)54 (49.5%)
 12 or above125 (22.9%)8 (7.3%)
Comorbidity99 (18.1%)12 (11.0%)0.070
Contact with household confirmed case240 (44.0%)33 (30.3%) 0.008
Symptoms/signs
 Fever371 (67.9%)90 (82.6%) 0.002
 Cough264 (48.4%)61 (56.0%)0.147
 Sore throat99 (18.1%)20 (18.3%)0.957
 Runny nose197 (36.1%)49 (45.0%)0.081
 Fatigue, malaise73 (12.2%)12 (11.0%)0.728
 Wheezing23 (4.2%)2 (1.8%)0.237
 Headache88 (16.1%)35 (32.1%) <0.001
 Myalgia48 (8.8%)4 (3.7%)0.071
 Diarrhea75 (13.7%)23 (21.1%) 0.049
 Vomiting91 (16.7%)23 (21.1%)0.265
Syndromic diagnosis*
 Upper respiratory tract infection195 (37.0%)73 (67.0%) <0.001
 Flu-like80 (15.2%)14 (12.8%)0.532
 Fever without a source84 (15.9%)5 (4.6%) 0.002
 Gastroenteritis40 (7.6%)7 (6.4%)0.671
 Pneumonia38 (7.2%)1 (0.9%) 0.013
 Asymptomatic44 (8.3%)3 (2.8%) 0.042
 Bronchitis/asthma flare18 (3.4%)2 (1.8%)0.389
 Bronchiolitis2 (0.4%)0 (0.0%)0.519

Categorical variables are compared using the χ2 or Fisher tests, and continuous variables using Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Significant P values (<0.05) are in bold.

The syndromic diagnosis was not recorded in 19 cases diagnosed in previous waves; percentages and P values are calculated omitting those cases.

Comparison Between Features of Ambulatory Children Attended During the Omicron Wave and Previous Waves at the Emergency Rooms Categorical variables are compared using the χ2 or Fisher tests, and continuous variables using Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Significant P values (<0.05) are in bold. The syndromic diagnosis was not recorded in 19 cases diagnosed in previous waves; percentages and P values are calculated omitting those cases. Notably, most patients during the Omicron wave were ≤11 years old. Nearly 83% of adolescents ≥12 years old are vaccinated in Spain, which may explain the low proportion of adolescents in our population. Some studies reported that around 1%–2% of children with COVID-19 need hospitalization, likewise our study.[3,4] This study suggests that children with the Omicron variant do not have a worse outcome than children with previous variants. Omicron in children seemed to have a similar clinical profile but with increased tropism for the upper airway and less tropism for the lungs.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank all the patients and families for their participation in this cohort, the staff members who cared for them at their personal risk in this time of epidemics and pediatricians who cared for the patients and helped gathering data including: Teresa Reinoso, Alfonso Cañete and Ane Plazaola (Hospital Universitario Infanta Sofía), David Melero, Angela Somodevilla and Raquel Guillén (UR Salud).
  1 in total

1.  Clinical spectrum of COVID-19 and risk factors associated with severity in Spanish children.

Authors:  Alfredo Tagarro; Elena Cobos-Carrascosa; Serena Villaverde; Francisco-Javier Sanz-Santaeufemia; Carlos Grasa; Antoni Soriano-Arandes; Alicia Hernanz; María Luisa Navarro; Rosa Pino; Cristina Epalza; Rosa Batista; Jana Rizo; María-Isabel Iglesias-Bouzas; Paula Rodríguez-Molino; Sara Villanueva-Medina; Jaime Carrasco-Colom; José-Antonio Alonso-Cadenas; María-José Mellado; Blanca Herrero; Susana Melendo; Mercedes De La Torre; Lourdes Calleja; Cristina Calvo; María Urretavizcaya-Martínez; Itziar Astigarraga; Ana Menasalvas; María Penin; Olaf Neth; Arantxa Berzosa; María De Ceano-Vivas; Paula Vidal; Isabel Romero; Raúl González; María Luz García; Juan-Miguel Mesa; Álvaro Ballesteros; María Bernardino; Cinta Moraleda
Journal:  Eur J Pediatr       Date:  2021-11-05       Impact factor: 3.860

  1 in total
  3 in total

1.  Profile of Children Affected During the Omicron Wave of SARS-CoV-2.

Authors:  Raghvendra Singh; Aashima Dabas; Mampy Das; Monica Juneja; Sonal Saxena; Vikas Manchanda
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  2022-10-15       Impact factor: 5.319

Review 2.  Omicron - The new SARS-CoV-2 challenge?

Authors:  A Lino; M A Cardoso; P Martins-Lopes; H M R Gonçalves
Journal:  Rev Med Virol       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 11.043

3.  Epidemiology of COVID-19 in Individuals under 18 Years Old in Cartagena, Colombia: An Ecological Study of the First 14 Months of the Pandemic.

Authors:  Steev Loyola; Eder Cano-Pérez; Jaison Torres-Pacheco; Dacia Malambo-Garcia; Ruben Gomez; Doris Gomez-Camargo
Journal:  Trop Med Infect Dis       Date:  2022-06-15
  3 in total

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