key: cord-0793837-yn2j21ka authors: Huang, Guohong; Yu, Deshan; Mao, Naiying; Zhu, Zhen; Zhang, Hui; Jiang, Zhongyi; Li, Hongyu; Zhang, Yan; Shi, Jing; Zhang, Shuang; Wang, Xinhua; Xu, Wenbo title: Viral Etiology of Acute Respiratory Infection in Gansu Province, China, 2011 date: 2013-05-14 journal: PLoS One DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064254 sha: 07396bda4a37d13aaf15fdf67d61971549f4162c doc_id: 793837 cord_uid: yn2j21ka BACKGROUND: Acute respiratory infections (ARIs) are the leading cause of children and their leading killer. ARIs are responsible for at least six percent of the world's disability and death. Viruses are one of the most common agents causing ARIs. Few studies on the viral etiology and clinical characteristics of ARIs have been performed in the northwest region of China, including Gansu Province. METHODS: Clinical and demographic information and throat swabs were collected from 279 patients from January 1st to December 30st, 2011. Multiplex RT-PCR was performed to detect 16 respiratory viral pathogens. RESULTS: 279 patients were admitted for ARIs. The patients aged from 1 month to 12 years, with the median age of 2 years. Of which, 105 (37.6%) were positive for at least one pathogen. A total of 136 respiratory viral pathogens were identified from the 105 patients. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was the most frequently detected pathogen (26.5%, 36/136), followed by parainfluenza virus (PIV) 1–3 (22.1%, 30/136), human rhinovirus (HRV) (21.3%, 29/136), human coronavirus (CoV) (10.3%, 14/136) and human adenovirus (HAdV) (9.6%, 13/136). Influenza A (Flu A), human metapneumovirus (hMPV) and human bocavirus (BoCA) were found 4.4%, 3.7% and 2.2%, respectively. Influenza B (Flu B) and seasonal influenza A H1N1(sH1N1) were not detected. Single-infections were detected in 30.5% (85/279) of cases. RSV was the most common pathogens in patients under 1 year and showed seasonal variation with peaks during winter and spring. CONCLUSIONS: This paper presents data on the epidemiology of viral pathogens associated with ARIs among children in Gansu Province, China. RSV is most frequently detected in our study. The findings could serve as a reference for local CDC in drawing up further plans to prevent and control ARIs. Acute respiratory infections (ARIs) are a group of diseases that include pneumonia, influenza, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). According to data from the World Health Organization (WHO), ARIs are responsible for at least six percent of the world's disability and death and cause a world disease burden of 94,037,000 (in terms of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs)) [1] . In terms of geographical distribution, 70% of children who died from ARIs are in Africa and Southeast Asia [2] . Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), influenza A and B viruses (Flu A and B), human coronavirus (CoV), human rhinoviruses (HRV), human adenoviruses (HAdV), human metapneumovirus (hMPV), and human bocavirus (BoCA) have been identified as the common causes of ARIs among populations [3, 4] . Although the incidence of ARIs could be similar around the world, and several groups have reported the prevalence and clinical presentation of viral infections in China, studies conducted in remote and less well developed areas of China are scarce. This paper presents data on the epidemiology of viral pathogens associated with ARI among children in Gansu Province, which located in a relatively undeveloped area of China. It aims to provide basic data to direct local disease prevention and control measures. From January 1st to December 31st, 2011, 279 eligible patients with ARIs were enrolled in this study. Ages ranged from 1 month to 12 years (median = 2 years) and 153(54.8%, N = 279) patients were aged between 1 and 6 years old. 183(65.6%, N = 279) were male (M/F ratio = 1.9). The distribution of respiratory viruses in males and females had no difference (x 2 = 0.009, P = 0.92). Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients are shown in Table 1 Table 3 shows the distribution of viral etiologies according to different age. RSV, HRV, PIV and CoV were detected in all groups. RSV was the most common pathogen in the patients under 1 year. The rates of RSV(17/153) and HRV(17/153) were similar in patients with the age between 1,6 years. 11 of the 13 HAdV cases and all of the patients with hMPV infected also belonged to this group. The respiratory viruses circulated in 2011 in Gansu Province were presented in Figure 1 . RSV showed seasonal variation with peaks during winter and spring. HRV was detected more frequently from May to June. Seasonality of PIV infection was apparent during February to May. CoVs were distributed throughout the year except in June, July and September and did not show obvious seasonality. Other viral pathogens appeared sporadically during the year. This was the first study to detect multiple respiratory viruses in hospitalized children with ARIs in Lanzhou, Gansu Province, China. A total of 279 patients were enrolled from January to December 2011. Among the patients, 37.6% was positive for at least one virus, which was consistent with other studies (34.6%-62.6%) [3, 4, [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] . But it was a little lower than the studies performed in Beijing, China [17] , which was probably due to the lower economic status, lower health awareness or environmental factors in Gansu Province. Our findings were consistent with other reports from Asia and China: RSV was the dominant cause of respiratory tract infection in children under 5 years [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] . RSV A was much more common than RSV B (34/2). RSV was reported to be responsible for 33.8 million cases of lower ARI in 2005, of which 96% was in developing countries [24] . It would be important for local pediatricians to use antibiotics cautiously when children are hospitalized with ARIs. HRV has been known to be responsible for upper ARIs as well as for some lower respiratory infection in children [25] [26] [27] [28] . Our findings showed the presence of HRV in all age groups. Most HRVs (23 of 29) were commonly detected as single infection, which agreed with the report of Bezerra et al [29] . The rest of the cases were co-infections with PIV, RSV. HAdV was another important virus detected as single infection; only one case was detected as co-infection with HRV. It differed from the conclusion of Bezerra et al [29] in which HAdV was the most common pathogen in co-infection. HAdV was reported to be responsible for 5-10% of ARI in children [11] . Our findings confirmed this report, showing a detection rate of 9.6 % (13/136), with 11 of the 13 patients infected by HAdV were under six years old. The high detection rate of PIV and CoV in co-infections and multiple infections was an interesting finding. PIV was present in 50% (12/24) of co-infections. In particular, PIV3 and CoV NL63 were the most common types found. The much higher detection rate of CoV NL63 differed from previous epidemiological studies, in which CoV 229E and CoV OC43 were the most common types [30] . It is possible that the other types of CoV were not circulating in the area during the period of study. Meanwhile, the findings suggest that nosocomial infection cannot be ruled out. Although hMPV had low prevalence in this study, only five hMPV infection cases were detected and were all aged between 1 to 6 years, which was in agreement with previous studies [31, 32] . We found that RSV was detected mainly during winter and spring, which corresponds with the cold and dry seasons. Typical continental climate with cold and dry winters, and the large A multiple RT-PCR method was used in this study to detect sixteen common respiratory viruses [33] . This method was economical and fast in obtaining pathogen information, and both its sensitivity and specificity have been confirmed. However, there were some limitations in the current work: 1) a study spanning only one year and covering a single sentinel surveillance hospital cannot recruit enough samples to analyze one particular pathogen; 2) only viral pathogens were detected in our study; bacterial pathogens that cause ARIs were not included, which prevented us from getting comprehensive data on the pathogens that cause ARIs in this region. In conclusion, this study provided background information concerning the respiratory viral etiology in Lanzhou area of Gansu Province. Our findings could serve as a reference for local CDC in drawing up further plans to prevent and control ARIs. They will also help clinicians to choose medicines for patients with ARIs. Moreover, the use of multiple RT-PCR makes rapid, effective, and affordable detection for virus a reality in resource limited areas. Between January 1st and December 31st, 2011, patients who met the inclusion criteria of ARI (aged under 12 years) were enrolled from the First Clinical Medical College of Lanzhou University, a large-scale general hospital in Lanzhou City, China. All patients were hospitalization and eligible for an onset of illness within 5 days. 1. Patients with ARIs must meet at least one of the inclusion criteria as follows: 1) fever (axillary temperature$37.2); 2) cough, sore throat, wheeze, expectoration, chest pain; 3) moist/dry rales; 4) X-ray examination of lung inflammation showed punctate, patchy or uniform density shadow. 2. Single infection means only one viral pathogen detected in one sample; Co-infection means there are 2 viral pathogens detected in one sample; Multiple-infection means more than 3 viral pathogens detected in one sample. A total of 279 throat swab specimens were taken from 279 inpatients. The throat swab specimens were collected by attending physician in 2-mL viral transport media, transported at 2uC-8uC and preserved at 280uC until to Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Beijing. Clinical information including demographic characteristics, symptoms, signs treatments, duration of hospitalization, clinical diagnosis were documented in case report forms (CRFs). This study was approved by the Ethics Review Committee of the Chinese CDC and all participants gave a signed informed consent. The viral nucleic acid was directly extracted from the clinical specimens by using a QIAamp mini viral RNA extraction kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA). RT-PCR was performed using a Qiagen OneStep RT-PCR kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) and GeneAmp 9700 thermal cycler (Applied Biosystems, Carlsbad, CA, USA). 25-mL reaction mixture contained 5 mL 56 PCR Mix, 1 mL of dNTP Mix, 1 mL of Enzyme Mix,1.25 mL of each primer [33] . The PCR products were analyzed by capillary gel electrophoresis (QIAxel DNA High Resolution kit) and the reference size were shown in Table 4 . The detection of 16 respiratory viral pathogens was done in two groups: Group A was tested for the presence of FluA, FluB, sH1N1, HRV, CoV 229E/CoV OC43/CoV HKU1, PIV1, and HAdV; Group B was tested for the presence of RSVA/B, CoV NL63, PIV2/PIV3, HMPV and BoCA. The count data adopted constituted the ratio and frequency table description, and a non-normal distribution of measurement data using the median to describe the central tendency and percentiles to describe the discrete tendency. The group ratios were compared using Pearson's x2 test, with an inspection level a of 0.05. Burden of disease in DALYs by sex and mortality stratum in WHO regions, estimates for 2001. The World Health Report Estimates of world-wide distribution of child deaths from acute respiratory infections Nucleic acid amplification-based diagnosis of respiratory virus infections Molecular diagnosis of respiratory viruses Study on the viral etiology of acute respiratory tract infections in the Shanghai area during 2009-2010 Prevalence of human respiratory viruses in adults with acute respiratory tract infections in Beijing Prevalence of human coronaviruses in adults with acute respiratory tract infections in Beijing Laboratory diagnosis and surveillance of human respiratory viruses by PCR in Impact of human coronavirus infections in otherwise healthy children who attended an emergency department Real-time reverse transcriptase PCR assay for detection of human metapneumoviruses from all known genetic lineages Respiratory viral infections detected by multiplex PCR among pediatric patients with lower respiratory tract infections seen at an urban hospital in Delhi from Prospective evaluation of a novel multiplex real-time PCR assay for detection of fifteen respiratory pathogens-duration of symptoms significantly affects detection rate Seasonal variations of 15 respiratory agents illustrated by the application of a multiplex polymerase chain reaction assay Rapid multiplex nested PCR for detection of respiratory viruses Viral etiology of severe pneumonia among Kenyan young infants and children Comparison of nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs for the diagnosis of eight respiratory viruses by real-time reverse transcription-PCR assays Etiology and Clinical Characterization of Respiratory Virus Infections in Adult Patients Attending an Emergency Department in Beijing Clinical presentation and severity of viral community-acquired pneumonia in young Nepalese children Burden of viral respiratory disease hospitalizations among children in a community of Seoul Influenza and the rates of hospitalization for respiratory disease among infants and young children An epidemiological study of RSV infection in the Gambia Etiology survey on virus of acute respiratory infection in Guangzhou from Detection for respiratory viruses in Shanghai with multiplex PCR from Global burden of acute lower respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial virus in young children: a systematic review and meta-analysis Distribution and seasonality of rhinovirus and other respiratory viruses in a crosssection of asthmatic children in Trinidad, West Indies Detection and typing by molecular techniques of respiratory viruses in children hospitalized for acute respiratory infection in Update on rhinovirus and coronavirus infections Do rhinoviruses reduce the probability of viral co-detection during acute respiratory tract infections? Viral and Atypical Bacterial Detection in Acute Respiratory Infection in Children Under five Years Update on rhinovirus and coronavirus infections A newly discovered human pneumovirus isolated from young children with respiratory tract disease Human Metapneumovirus: Lessons Learned over the First Decade A GeXP based multiplex RT-PCR assay for simultaneous detection of twelve human respiratory viruses