TY - JOUR
T1 - Global role and burden of influenza in pediatric respiratory hospitalizations, 1982-2012: a systematic analysis
AU - Global Respiratory Hospitalizations—Influenza Proportion Positive (GRIPP) Working Group
AU - Lafond, Kathryn E
AU - Nair, Harish
AU - Rasooly, Mohammad Hafiz
AU - Valente, Fátima
AU - Booy, Robert
AU - Rahman, Mahmudur
AU - Kitsutani, Paul
AU - Yu, Hongjie
AU - Guzman, Guiselle
AU - Coulibaly, Daouda
AU - Armero, Julio
AU - Jima, Daddi
AU - Howie, Stephen R C
AU - Ampofo, William
AU - Mena, Ricardo
AU - Chadha, Mandeep
AU - Sampurno, Ondri Dwi
AU - Emukule, Gideon O
AU - Nurmatov, Zuridin
AU - Corwin, Andrew
AU - Heraud, Jean Michel
AU - Noyola, Daniel E
AU - Cojocaru, Radu
AU - Nymadawa, Pagbajabyn
AU - Barakat, Amal
AU - Adedeji, Adebayo
AU - von Horoch, Marta
AU - Olveda, Remigio
AU - Nyatanyi, Thierry
AU - Venter, Marietjie
AU - Mmbaga, Vida
AU - Chittaganpitch, Malinee
AU - Nguyen, Tran Hien
AU - Theo, Andros
AU - Whaley, Melissa
AU - Azziz-Baumgartner, Eduardo
AU - Bresee, Joseph
AU - Campbell, Harry
AU - Widdowson, Marc-Alain
N1 - FTX
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - BACKGROUND: The global burden of pediatric severe respiratory illness is substantial, and influenza viruses contribute to this burden. Systematic surveillance and testing for influenza among hospitalized children has expanded globally over the past decade. However, only a fraction of the data has been used to estimate influenza burden. In this analysis, we use surveillance data to provide an estimate of influenza-associated hospitalizations among children worldwide.METHODS AND FINDINGS: We aggregated data from a systematic review (n = 108) and surveillance platforms (n = 37) to calculate a pooled estimate of the proportion of samples collected from children hospitalized with respiratory illnesses and positive for influenza by age group (<6 mo, <1 y, <2 y, <5 y, 5-17 y, and <18 y). We applied this proportion to global estimates of acute lower respiratory infection hospitalizations among children aged <1 y and <5 y, to obtain the number and per capita rate of influenza-associated hospitalizations by geographic region and socio-economic status. Influenza was associated with 10% (95% CI 8%-11%) of respiratory hospitalizations in children <18 y worldwide, ranging from 5% (95% CI 3%-7%) among children <6 mo to 16% (95% CI 14%-20%) among children 5-17 y. On average, we estimated that influenza results in approximately 374,000 (95% CI 264,000 to 539,000) hospitalizations in children <1 y-of which 228,000 (95% CI 150,000 to 344,000) occur in children <6 mo-and 870,000 (95% CI 610,000 to 1,237,000) hospitalizations in children <5 y annually. Influenza-associated hospitalization rates were more than three times higher in developing countries than in industrialized countries (150/100,000 children/year versus 48/100,000). However, differences in hospitalization practices between settings are an important limitation in interpreting these findings.CONCLUSIONS: Influenza is an important contributor to respiratory hospitalizations among young children worldwide. Increasing influenza vaccination coverage among young children and pregnant women could reduce this burden and protect infants <6 mo.
AB - BACKGROUND: The global burden of pediatric severe respiratory illness is substantial, and influenza viruses contribute to this burden. Systematic surveillance and testing for influenza among hospitalized children has expanded globally over the past decade. However, only a fraction of the data has been used to estimate influenza burden. In this analysis, we use surveillance data to provide an estimate of influenza-associated hospitalizations among children worldwide.METHODS AND FINDINGS: We aggregated data from a systematic review (n = 108) and surveillance platforms (n = 37) to calculate a pooled estimate of the proportion of samples collected from children hospitalized with respiratory illnesses and positive for influenza by age group (<6 mo, <1 y, <2 y, <5 y, 5-17 y, and <18 y). We applied this proportion to global estimates of acute lower respiratory infection hospitalizations among children aged <1 y and <5 y, to obtain the number and per capita rate of influenza-associated hospitalizations by geographic region and socio-economic status. Influenza was associated with 10% (95% CI 8%-11%) of respiratory hospitalizations in children <18 y worldwide, ranging from 5% (95% CI 3%-7%) among children <6 mo to 16% (95% CI 14%-20%) among children 5-17 y. On average, we estimated that influenza results in approximately 374,000 (95% CI 264,000 to 539,000) hospitalizations in children <1 y-of which 228,000 (95% CI 150,000 to 344,000) occur in children <6 mo-and 870,000 (95% CI 610,000 to 1,237,000) hospitalizations in children <5 y annually. Influenza-associated hospitalization rates were more than three times higher in developing countries than in industrialized countries (150/100,000 children/year versus 48/100,000). However, differences in hospitalization practices between settings are an important limitation in interpreting these findings.CONCLUSIONS: Influenza is an important contributor to respiratory hospitalizations among young children worldwide. Increasing influenza vaccination coverage among young children and pregnant women could reduce this burden and protect infants <6 mo.
KW - Adolescent
KW - Child
KW - Child, Preschool
KW - Epidemiological Monitoring
KW - Female
KW - Global Health
KW - Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data
KW - Humans
KW - Infant
KW - Influenza, Human/epidemiology
KW - Male
KW - Respiratory Tract Diseases/epidemiology
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001977
DO - 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001977
M3 - A1: Web of Science-article
C2 - 27011229
SN - 1549-1676
VL - 13
SP - e1001977
JO - PLoS Medicine
JF - PLoS Medicine
IS - 3
ER -