| Literature DB >> 35387034 |
Heidi Makrinioti1,2, Paraskevi Maggina3, John Lakoumentas3, Paraskevi Xepapadaki3, Stella Taka3, Spyridon Megremis4, Maria Manioudaki3, Sebastian L Johnston5, Maria Tsolia6, Vassiliki Papaevangelou7, Nikolaos G Papadopoulos3,8.
Abstract
Introduction: Acute bronchiolitis is one of the most common respiratory infections in infancy. Although most infants with bronchiolitis do not get hospitalized, infants with hospitalized bronchiolitis are more likely to develop wheeze exacerbations during the first years of life. The objective of this prospective cohort study was to develop machine learning models to predict incidence and persistence of wheeze exacerbations following the first hospitalized episode of acute bronchiolitis.Entities:
Keywords: bronchiolitis; machine learning; rhinovirus; virus; wheeze
Year: 2021 PMID: 35387034 PMCID: PMC8974688 DOI: 10.3389/falgy.2021.728389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Allergy ISSN: 2673-6101
Figure 1(A) Flow diagram describing patients' recruitment and follow-up. (B) Absolute frequencies of viruses detected in nasopharyngeal washes of infants with bronchiolitis and control patients—each node represents a patient and size is related to the frequency of detected viral agents.
Demographic characteristics of infants with bronchiolitis.
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|---|---|
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| Median (Q1-Q2) | 2.67 (1.25, 4) |
| Male | 75 (57.3%) |
| Female | 56 (42.7%) |
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| Median (Q1-Q2) | 3.15 (2.83–3.4) |
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| Median (Q1-Q2) | 30 (14–60) |
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| Normal delivery | 69 (53%) |
| Cesarean section | 62 (47%) |
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| 56 (42.7%) | |
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| 75 (57.3%) | |
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| Mother, | 19 (14.5%) |
| Father, | 23 (17.6%) |
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| 18 (13.7%) | |
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| Mother, | 8 (6.1%) |
| Father, | 12 (9.2%) |
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| 12 (9.2%) | |
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| 25 (19.1%) | |
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| 8 (6.1%) |
Absolute frequencies of viruses detected in nasopharyngeal washes of infants with bronchiolitis.
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|---|---|
| RSV | 58 (44.3%) |
| RV | 44 (33.6%) |
| Adenovirus | 21 (16%) |
| MPV | 22 (16.8%) |
| Influenza virus (IFV) | 21 (16%) |
| Parainfluenza virus (PIV) | 18 (13.7%) |
| Coronavirus | 8 (6.1%) |
| Human bocavirus | 3 (2.3%) |
Figure 2(A) Association between respiratory viruses detected in nasopharyngeal washes (RV-only, RSV-only, RV-RSV double positive, other virus-positive) and Clusters 1 and 2. (B) Graph depicting significant correlations between demographic and clinical characteristics and viruses in nasopharyngeal washes (RV-only, RSV-only, RV-RSV double positive, other virus-positive).
Figure 3(A) Violin plots depicting differences in mean clinical severity score in infants hospitalized with RV-only, RSV-only, RV and RSV-double positive and other virus-positive bronchiolitis. (B) Figure describing the relative importance of predictors of cluster outcomes.
Figure 4Graph depicting the ROC curve of the prediction model (sensitivity 75.56% and specificity 91.86%).