Viral and atypical bacterial aetiologies of infection in hospitalised patients admitted with clinical suspicion of influenza in Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia
Case fatality rate
Rhinovirus
Etiology
Epidemiology
Chlamydiaceae
Immunology
Respiratory tract infections
Respiratory system
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Virology
Human bocavirus
Health Sciences
Epidemiology and Pathogenesis of Respiratory Viral Infections
Chlamydia
Internal medicine
Management and Epidemiology of Pneumonia
FOS: Clinical medicine
Original Articles
Pneumonia
Chlamydophila pneumoniae
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Virus
3. Good health
Medicine
Clinical Practice Guidelines
Influenza Virus Research and Epidemiology
DOI:
10.1111/irv.12326
Publication Date:
2015-05-16T05:54:38Z
AUTHORS (24)
ABSTRACT
BackgroundInfluenza constitutes a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. There is limited information about the aetiology of infection presenting clinically as influenza in hospitalised adults and children in South‐East Asia. Such data are important for future management of respiratory infections.ObjectivesTo describe the aetiology of infection presenting clinically as influenza in those hospitalised in South‐East Asia.MethodsRespiratory specimens archived from July 2008 to June 2009 from patients hospitalised with suspected influenza from Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam were tested for respiratory viruses and atypical bacteria by polymerase chain reaction.ResultsA total of 1222 patients’ samples were tested. Of 1222, 776 patients (63·5%) were under the age of 5. Viruses detected included rhinoviruses in 229 of 1222 patients (18·7%), bocaviruses in 200 (16·4%), respiratory syncytial viruses in 144 (11·8%), parainfluenza viruses in 140 (11·5%; PIV1: 32; PIV2: 12; PIV3: 71; PIV4: 25), adenovirus in 102 (8·4%), influenza viruses in 93 (7·6%; influenza A: 77; influenza B: 16) and coronaviruses in 23 (1·8%; OC43: 14; E229: 9). Bacterial pathogens were Mycoplasma pneumoniae (n = 33, 2·7%), Chlamydophila psittaci (n = 2), C. pneumoniae (n = 1), Bordetella pertussis (n = 1) and Legionella pneumophila (n = 2). Overall, in‐hospital case fatality rate was 29 of 1222 (2·4%).ConclusionRespiratory viruses were the most commonly detected pathogens in patients hospitalised with a clinical suspicion of influenza. Rhinovirus was the most frequently detected virus, and M. pneumoniae, the most common atypical bacterium. The low number of detected influenza viruses demonstrates a low benefit for empirical oseltamivir therapy, unless during an influenza outbreak.
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