AI Article Synopsis

  • Human rhinovirus (HRV) is the leading cause of upper respiratory infections, with 168 different types that provide strong immunity only to the same type and weak immunity to others, making its transmission patterns complex and understudied.
  • Between December 2015 and November 2016, a study collected nasopharyngeal swabs from patients across nine outpatient facilities to analyze HRV prevalence and diversity, detecting HRV in 18.4% of samples, with successful sequencing of 77.3%.
  • Findings revealed varying temporal persistence patterns among HRV types, indicating frequent community invasions, and showed spatial clustering of similar types in nearby health facilities, suggesting both rapid spread and multiple separate invasions of the virus types.

Article Abstract

Human rhinovirus (HRV) is the predominant cause of upper respiratory tract infections, resulting in a significant public health burden. The virus circulates as many different types (168), each generating strong homologous, but weak heterotypic, immunity. The influence of these features on transmission patterns of HRV in the community is understudied. Nasopharyngeal swabs were collected from patients with symptoms of acute respiratory infection (ARI) at nine out-patient facilities across a Health and Demographic Surveillance System between December 2015 and November 2016. HRV was diagnosed by real-time RT-PCR, and the VP4/VP2 genomic region of the positive samples sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis was used to determine the HRV types. Classification models and G-test statistic were used to investigate HRV type spatial distribution. Demographic characteristics and clinical features of ARI were also compared. Of 5,744 NPS samples collected, HRV was detected in 1057 (18.4%), of which 817 (77.3%) were successfully sequenced. HRV species A, B and C were identified in 360 (44.1%), 67 (8.2%) and 390 (47.7%) samples, respectively. In total, 87 types were determined: 39, 10 and 38 occurred within species A, B and C, respectively. HRV types presented heterogeneous temporal patterns of persistence. Spatially, identical types occurred over a wide distance at similar times, but there was statistically significant evidence for clustering of types between health facilities in close proximity or linked by major road networks. This study records a high prevalence of HRV in out-patient presentations exhibiting high type diversity. Patterns of occurrence suggest frequent and independent community invasion of different types. Temporal differences of persistence between types may reflect variation in type-specific population immunity. Spatial patterns suggest either rapid spread or multiple invasions of the same type, but evidence of similar types amongst close health facilities, or along road systems, indicate type partitioning structured by local spread.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6234744PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.14836.2DOI Listing

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