AI Article Synopsis

  • Preterm infants are vulnerable to lower respiratory tract infections, particularly severe cases of RSV, and the study aimed to identify risk factors for severe RSV disease in infants born before 34 weeks of gestation.
  • Among 2,101 preterm infants studied, 86 were hospitalized due to RSV, and 31 of those experienced very severe lower respiratory tract infections requiring ventilation support.
  • The key finding was that a younger corrected age for prematurity at the time of infection was strongly associated with a higher risk of severe RSV disease, suggesting that targeting prophylaxis and interventions for these infants could help reduce the severity of their condition.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Preterm infants are at risk of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI), including Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) associated bronchiolitis, for which palivizumab prophylaxis can be proposed. Our aim was to determine risk factors of very severe RSV disease in children born before 34 weeks of gestation.

Methods: Among 2,101 infants born before 34 weeks of gestation in 3 maternity wards between 2012 and 2017, the laboratory confirmed RSV-infected patients requiring hospitalization before 12 months of corrected age were retrospectively included. We collected data about the neonatal period, the palivizumab prophylaxis and the hospitalization for a RSV-related LRTI. LRTI was considered as very severe (VS-LRTI) when patients required invasive or non-invasive positive pressure ventilation.

Results: Among 86 included patients, 31 met the criteria of VS-LRTI. The VS-LRTI patients had a higher birth gestational age and weight but less heart disease and bronchopulmonary dysplasia. They received palivizumab prophylaxis less frequently than the other patients but the difference was not significant. At the onset of infection, VS-LRTI patients had a younger corrected age for prematurity and presented more frequently with apnea, bradycardia, life-threatening event, hemodynamic failure, hypercapnia. Using logistic regression, the main factor associated with VS-LRTI was a younger corrected age for prematurity at the onset of infection [Odd ratio for each month of corrected age = 0.77 (0.62; 0.93), = 0.012].

Conclusion: Infants at the highest risk of VS-LRTI were infants with a younger corrected age for prematurity. Therefore, a better targeting of infants requiring palivizumab prophylaxis and early interventions at hospital discharge could limit VS-LRTI in these infants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9301069PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.884120DOI Listing

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