key: cord-0967891-eutmowm4 authors: Minosse, C.; Selleri, M.; Zaniratti, M.S.; Cappiello, G.; Longo, R.; Schifano, E.; Spanò, A.; Petrosillo, N.; Lauria, F.N.; Puro, V.; Capobianchi, M.R. title: Frequency of detection of respiratory viruses in the lower respiratory tract of hospitalized adults date: 2008-03-14 journal: J Clin Virol DOI: 10.1016/j.jcv.2008.01.012 sha: f851b04872c7cf4d9f358e9ee241ce2c34a8c573 doc_id: 967891 cord_uid: eutmowm4 BACKGROUND: Respiratory infections are the most common infections in humans. The prevalence of respiratory viruses in adults is largely underestimated, and relevant data mostly concern infants and children. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the prevalence of respiratory viruses in adults hospitalized in Italy. STUDY DESIGN: During April 2004–May 2005, 510 consecutive lower respiratory tract samples were prospectively collected. These were evaluated with a molecular panel that detected 12 respiratory viruses. RESULTS: Two hundred and fifteen samples were positive for at least one viral pathogen, with an overall sample prevalence of 42.2%. Human rhinoviruses (HRVs) were the most commonly detected viruses (32.9%), followed by influenza virus (FLU)-A (9.0%); the other viruses were 2% or less. Multiple agents were detected in 30 samples from 29 patients, resulting in a co-infection rate of 6.7%. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows a high prevalence of viruses in the lower respiratory tract samples of hospitalized adults, mostly HRV and FLU-A. It is not possible to establish the role of viruses detected at low frequency, but our findings suggest the necessity to consider them as potential causes or precursors of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs). The etiology of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) in adults, which are an important cause of morbidity, remains undetermined in more than 50% of cases (Fine et al., 1999; Garbino et al., 2002; File, 2003) , mostly due to limited diagnostic procedures. The prevalence of respiratory viruses in adults is largely unexplored, as most relevant data concern infants and children (Choi et al., 2006; Costa et al., 2006; Kusel et al., 2006; Ma et al., 2006; Ordas et al., 2006; Pierangeli et al., 2007) . Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), parainfluenzaviruses (PIVs), influenzaviruses (FLUs) and adenoviruses (AdVs) are considered the leading causes of acute viral LRTIs (Henderson et al., 1979; Hall et al., 1990; Yun et al., 1995; Hong et al., 2001) . However, many other respiratory viruses have been recently identified as possible causative agents of LRTIs. Human rhinoviruses (HRVs), which previously were believed to cause only mild upper respiratory illnesses, have been found in association with acute and chronic LRTIs, including asthma exacerbations and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), although their role as causative agents has only been established for asthma (Singh and Busse, 2007; Papadopoulos et al., 2002; Friedlander and Busse, 2005; Xatzipsalti et al., 2005) . Newly discovered viruses, such as human metapneumovirus (hMPV) and human coronaviruses (hCoVs) have been associated with LRTIs in children (van den Hoogen et al., 2001; Fouchier et al., 2004; van der Hoek et al., 2004; Choi et al., 2006) . The aim of this study was to assess the point prevalence of a full spectrum of respiratory viruses in the lower respiratory tract specimens of hospitalized adults by using a molecular diagnostic panel. A prospective collection of 510 lower respiratory samples from 433 adult patients with pulmonary diseases, admitted to three Italian hospitals was performed. Clinicalepidemiological data were collected through a standardized questionnaire. Patients with suspect Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection were not included in the analysis. The study was approved by the Institutional Ethics Committees, and informed consent signed by participants. The selection criterion for patients' enrolment was to have any one of the following samples sent to the laboratory for routine microbiological evaluation: sputum (SP), bronchoalveolar lavages (BALs), or endotracheal aspirate (EA). To minimize the possibility that positive results reflected contamination from the upper respiratory tract, only samples containing more than 25 polymorphonuclear leucocytes per field (40×) were processed (Murray and Washington, 1975; Geckler et al., 1977) . Less than 4% of the samples did not meet this criterion and were discarded. Half of each sample was submitted to standard microbiological analysis (common microbiological culture and, in case of positive result, identification and antibody susceptibility test), while the remainder was stored at −80 • C for the molecular analysis. During April 2004-May 2005, a total of 510 consecutive lower tract respiratory samples (329 SP, 165 EA and 16 BAL), which were considered appropriate on the basis of microscope inspection, were analyzed. The samples were thawed and liquefied by using 1:1 Sputasol (Oxoid Ltd., Basingstoke, England), and then underwent DNA/RNA extraction (Boom et al., 1990) . RNA was reverse transcribed with random primers with a Reverse Transcriptase Kit (Invitrogen, Milan, Italy). Control DNA ((globin DNA) and RNA (MS2 phage genome) preparations were spiked into the samples before the extraction, to control their suitability for PCR/RT-PCR. The molecular diagnostic panel included: FLU-A and -B, hMPV, AdV, PIV-1, -2 and -3, RSV, HRV, hCoV-OC43, -229E and -NL63. Specific primers and PCR or RT-PCR conditions were as previously described (Allard et al., 1994; Pitkaranta et al., 1997; Echevarria et al., 1998; Gröndahl et al., 1999; Allard et al., 2001; Steininger et al., 2001; Maggi et al., 2003; Fouchier et al., 2004; Bastien et al., 2005; Esper et al., 2005; Woo et al., 2005; Minosse et al., 2007) . The sensitivity of the assays ranged between 1 and 10 copies for FLU-A, AdV, PIV-1, -2 and -3, RSV, HRV and hCoV-NL63; between 10 and 50 copies for FLU-B and hMPV A; and about 300 copies for hCoV-OC43. These sensitivity values, established by probit analysis on plasmids containing the target region as the insert, were confirmed by participation in the Quality Control for Molecular Diagnostics External Quality Assurance (QCMD EQA) programmes (Glasgow, UK). From the hMPV QCMD EQA programme MPV.RSV06, we determined that the sensitivity for hMPV B of our test was much lower (>1000 times) than for other respiratory viruses. The amplified products were separated by agarose gel electrophoresis and UV-visualized after ethidium bromide staining. A molecular diagnostic panel for detection of 12 viruses was applied to 510 lower respiratory samples from 433 adult patients hospitalized with pulmonary diseases. The most common respiratory illnesses in the patients were: COPD, 45.3%, pneumonia (30.5%) and acute respiratory illness (ARI, 17.1%); 19.6% of patients were in the intensive care unit, and 17.5% were receiving assisted ventilation (Table 1) . Two hundred and fifteen specimens (42.2%) were positive for a respiratory virus ( Table 2) . The most common viruses were HRV (32.9%), FLU-A (9.0%) and hCoV-NL63 (2.0%). The frequency of the other viruses ranged from 0.2 to 1.4%. In 30 out of 510 samples (5.9%), corresponding to 29 out of 433 patients (6.7%), more than one virus was detected. Multiple detection included HRV + FLU-A (2.9% of total samples), HRV + FLU-B and HRV + hCoV-NL63 (0.6% each combina- tion), HRV + hCoV-OC43 (0.4%), HRV + AdV, HRV + PIV-1, HRV + RSV, FLU-A + hCoV-OC43, AdV + hCoV-NL63, HRV + FLU-A + PIV-1 and HRV + FLU-A + AdV (0.2% each combination). The association with the sample type (either EA, or SP, or BAL) could be evaluated only for the most frequent viruses, i.e. FLU-A and HRV, showing that HRV, and not FLU-A, was unevenly distributed (more frequent in SP and BAL than in EA, Table 2 ). Data on the smoking status was available for 403/433 patients: the frequency of patients positive to any virus was similar in smokers and non-smokers (49.4% vs. 50.6%, p = 0.742), and the frequency of individual viruses did not significantly differ according to the smoker status (for instance, HRV positive patients were 42.2% in smokers and 34.5% in non-smokers, p = 0.137). In addition, similar frequencies of virus-positive samples were obtained when comparing patients with COPD vs. patients without COPD (57.1% vs. 56.7%); patients with pneumonia vs. subjects with no record of pneumonia (54.4% in both cases); or patients with ARI vs. subjects without ARI (44.7% vs. 51.5%, p = 0.342). In addition, the frequency of virus-positive samples did not significantly differ among patients with pneumonia, COPD and ARI (p = 0.207). The monthly distribution of respiratory agents over the study period (Fig. 1) highlights a peak in January-February for HRV and FLU-A. Many reports have highlighted the possible role of viruses as causative agents, or as possible co-factors, in LRTIs. We applied a large molecular diagnostic panel which included 12 respiratory viruses to evaluate the prevalence of respiratory pathogens in adults hospitalized in Italy, during April 2004-May 2005. Although we would be unable to detect some viral respiratory pathogens, such as bocavirus, coronavirus HKU1 and parainfluenzavirus 4, this is the first extensive investigation of lower respiratory tract secretions from adults that was capable of detecting such a wide selection of respiratory pathogens. We have made the assumption that the samples represent the lower respiratory tract, as a recognized microscope inspection criterion was used to validate their quality. However, as expectorated sputum is necessarily contaminated with oral contents, it is not possible to rule out that the virus detected in the samples (mainly SP) could actually derive from contamination by upper respiratory tract secretions. In fact, the rate of positivity in SP is higher than in EA and BAL (47.4% vs. 35.1% and 37.5%, respectively) ; however, this is not the case for all viruses (i.e. FLU-A). In addition, the presence of several viruses (FLU-A, PIV-3, HRV, hCoV-OC43 and hCoV-NL63) on both EA and BAL, suggests that contamination with oral secretions is not a major source of the virus present in the analyzed samples. Our results confirm previous data that HRV are the most frequent viruses in lower respiratory tract samples (Garbino et al., 2004; Puro et al., 2005) , and strongly support the association of HRV with LRTIs, already hypothesized in previous studies based on upper respiratory samples (Tsolia et al., 2004) . However, based on the present data it is not possible to establish the precise role of HRV as a leading cause, as well as its possible involvement as co-factor in LRTIs. Among the other viruses, accounting for 7.2% of positive samples, hCoV-NL63 was detected in 2.0% of samples. The involvement of hCoV (namely NL63) in lower respiratory diseases has been largely hypothesized, but available data are mostly based on upper respiratory samples, mostly on the basis of studies in pediatric patients (Arden et al., 2005; Bastien et al., 2005; Boivin et al., 2005; Chiu et al., 2005; Ebihara et al., 2005; Moes et al., 2005; Pierangeli et al., 2007) . The circulation of hCoV-NL63 in Italy is probably underreported. There is only one other report concerning this virus and lower respiratory samples from adults (Gerna et al., 2006) . We did not detect hMPV in our patients, although this is a relatively common respiratory pathogen (van den Hoogen et al., 2001; Choi et al., 2006) . The absence of hMPV is probably due to the low sensitivity of the RT-PCR assay used in this study (particularly for hMPV B). Alternatively, it is possible that sputasol, used to liquefy the samples, could have affected the sensitivity of the RT-PCR used. This issue could also apply to other viruses investigated in this study, such as RSV, and needs further investigation. In conclusion, our study shows a high prevalence of viruses, especially HRV and influenza virus, in the lower respiratory tract samples of adult hospitalized patients with pulmonary diseases, without any significant difference in the frequency of virus-positivity among patients with pneumonia, COPD and ARI. Additional viruses were detected at low frequency. It is not possible to establish the role of viruses detected at low frequency as causative agents or as co-factors in LRTIs, but these results highlight the necessity to consider them as potential causes of LRTIs. 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Spallanzani. Neither funding source influenced the design, conduct or reporting of this study.Anna Prygodzicz and Carla Nisii are gratefully acknowledged for assistance in writing the manuscript. We acknowledge the enthusiastic contribution of M. Visca, M. Cava, G. Gualano, who assisted in clinical investigation and collaborated with sample and data collection.